The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Victorian button-up meets raw punk at Paris Fashion Week

- By Thomas Adamson

The raw sexuality of British punk was on full display at Austrian designer Andreas Kronthaler’s show for Vivienne Westwood.

PARIS » The buttoned-up styles of the Victorian era have met their nemesis in the unbridled sexuality of British punk in contrastin­g shows at Paris Fashion Week.

Here are some of the fallwinter highlights from the shows Saturday, which included Vivienne Westwood, Elie Saab and Junya Watanabe:

VIVIENNEWE­STWOOD GETS SAUCY

The raw sexuality of British punk was on full display at Austrian designer Andreas Kronthaler’s show for Vivienne Westwood.

Big red-white-and-blue carpets — in the colors of the Union Jack — led guests’ eyes up to the show’s decor of dismembere­d, upside-downmanneq­uin legs. Three scantily- clad Goth ravers climbed up onto podiums around the runway as the show began and started to gyrate provocativ­ely.

The clothes channeled the punk styles that made Westwood’s name in the ‘70s — but it was also a celebratio­n of violent color and couture.

A diaphanous marbled pastel froufrou gown looked initially like a wa- tercolor painting — until, on further inspection, the belt that consisted of adult toys came into focus.

The model’s thick eyebrows evoked famed Italian porn star-turned-politician, La Cicciolina. She also had barbed wire covering her lips and wore kinky red lace-up boots.

The eccentric collection included Arab-style headdresse­s that were given an urban reworking, as well as styles inspired by the 18th century.

The best look? A giant flame red baroque tulle hat with a period fastening under the chin.

Members of South African hip hop group Die Antwoord and rappers Ninja and Yolandi Visser applauded fromthe front row.

DEAR VIVIENNE: A LOVE LETTER TO WESTWOOD

Instead of the program notes, Andreas Kronthaler left guests a photocopy of a touching love letter he’d written to his wife and design partner VivienneWe­stwood, 76.

The 65-year- old Austrian designer had handwritte­n the missive on blue Eurostar notepaper on Feb. 28 while traveling between London and Paris on the cross-Channel train.

“Dear Vivienne. Heart. God how long have we known each other?” it began, before listing all the fashion influences Westwood had exerted on him over the years.

“When in doubt: dress up! ... These mantras of yours and so much more became part of my life and work. I still thank you to this day,” it read.

Kronthaler first met Westwood in 1988 and they wed in 1993. He had for a long time taken the role as a silent creative partner but took over officially as designer in recent years.

Kronthaler ended it: “Love you forever. Andreas.”

ELIE SAAB’S VICTORIAN FASHION

Elie Saab went to the “dark romance” of the Victorian era for inspiratio­n for his brooding fall-winter offerings.

The house produced a predominan­tly black collection of high necklines, statement bell and Juliette sleeves, defined shoulders and lots and lots and lots of ruffles.

There was a delicacy to some of the fabrics and detailing such as in large velvet bows draped from collars inspired by the 19th-century paintings of France’s Auguste Renoir.

Saab fused that coveredup era’s styles with an exploratio­n of all things flo- ral — and served it on his bread-and-butter design choice, cinched-waisted gowns.

The collection, entitled “Winter Bouquets,” had blooms as prints, embroideri­es and appliques in white, blush, powder blue and burgundy.

JUNYA WATANABE GOES TOP HEAVY

In a collection that took its vibe from the street, JunyaWatan­abe’s edgy collection went stylishly off-kilter.

Oversize double-breasted suit jackets towered above floral leggings in an intentiona­l effect that made the legs look like sticks. It was given greater resonance with large block-like sneakers and preppy socks.

Elements of deconstruc­tion — such as billowing sleeves that looked like pieces of fabric snipped away, or trench coats partially hidden in fur — demonstrat­ed the skill that showed why the Japanese fashion designer was originally the protégé of Comme des Garcons designer Rei Kawakubo.

Bright reds and blues were then injected into the color palette — such as in one statement trapezesha­ped raincoat and in one mushroom-shaped bubble jacket — giving the 41-piece show an on-trend ‘80s vibe.

 ??  ??
 ?? KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Models wear creations for Elie Saab’s ready-to-wear fall/winter 2018/ 2019 fashion week
KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Models wear creations for Elie Saab’s ready-to-wear fall/winter 2018/ 2019 fashion week
 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Models wear creations for the Comme des Garcons ready-to-wear fall/winter 2018/ 2019 fashion collection presented in Paris, Saturday.
THIBAULT CAMUS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Models wear creations for the Comme des Garcons ready-to-wear fall/winter 2018/ 2019 fashion collection presented in Paris, Saturday.
 ?? KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A model wears a creation for Elie Saab’s ready-to-wear fall/winter 2018/ 2019 fashion week runway show in Paris, Saturday.
KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A model wears a creation for Elie Saab’s ready-to-wear fall/winter 2018/ 2019 fashion week runway show in Paris, Saturday.
 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A model wears a creation for the Comme des Garcons ready-to-wear fall/winter 2018/ 2019 fashion collection presented in Paris, Saturday.
THIBAULT CAMUS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A model wears a creation for the Comme des Garcons ready-to-wear fall/winter 2018/ 2019 fashion collection presented in Paris, Saturday.

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