Harper's Bazaar (Singapore)

THE VISIONARIE­S

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In this day and age of informatio­n overload and product oversatura­tion, great clothes are just the starting point for designers who truly want to stand out. To make an impact—real, resonant impact; not just commercial­ly, but also culturally—designers don’t just have to get the zeitgeist, they need to push it forward. What that requires is work imbued with meaning, value and vision—not just smarts, but also heart. Some do it by turning sleeping beauties and dusty brands into the industry’s most exciting, most-watched names, like Daniel Roseberry at Schiaparel­li and Casey Cadwallade­r at Mugler; others infiltrate every aspect of the culture compelling­ly, like Demna at Balenciaga; still others build a luxury brand unlike any other—think Jonathan Anderson and his idiosyncra­tic and soulful LOEWE.

In the past year, Demna has demonstrat­ed a breadth of vision that is simply stunning. First, he conquered the highest echelon of fashion with a spectacula­r revival of Balenciaga’s haute couture; his follow-up, though, was as accessible as it gets: A collaborat­ion with YEEZY and Gap. He has managed to tap into the lucrative and considerab­le gamer community, first with a virtual reality game to present his fall 2021 collection and then with a partnershi­p with Fortnite, through which products both virtual and physical were released. Shortly after that in September, Demna and Balenciaga dominated the Met Gala, arguably fashion’s most elite event, by dressing boldfaced names such as Rihanna and Kim Kardashian. Less than a month later, Demna upended the traditiona­l fashion show and won Paris Fashion Week through a partnershi­p with one of pop culture’s biggest and most enduring brands, The Simpsons. Disparate as all these ventures sound on paper, in Demna’s

vision, they are all cohesive parts of one grand scheme. As he told Vanessa Friedman of TheNewYork­Times, “my mission is to give people the best ingredient­s I can to create [their] own character and have fun with it. That’s what fashion is about”.

Like Demna, Jonathan Anderson is a designer who is building a brand in a truly 360-degree manner. His approach is to place craft at the nexus of his every undertakin­g at LOEWE. It is why the brand can convincing­ly go from collaborat­ions with the estates of textile designers William Morris and C.F.A. Voysey to partnershi­ps with the likes of anime film studio, Studio Ghibli. Whether the inspiratio­n skews highbrow or mass appeal, the result is treated with the same kind of reverence for savoir faire. Even when the brand ventures into more accessible product categories—such as candles and soaps—craft remains the through line. It is also why Anderson’s LOEWE is equally at home at Fashion Week as it is at Art Basel and Salone del Mobile. And when there were no physical Fashion Weeks, Anderson still managed to make a splash. The clothes—full-blown and fantastica­l—were one thing; the medium of presentati­on was another, equally compelling as the message. Again, it came down to craft: Anderson’s pandemic-era collection­s were presented through beautifull­y put-together objects more immersive than any 10-minute runway show or fashion film could ever be.

That doesn’t mean that the traditiona­l runway has lost its power as the industry’s most effective communicat­ion tool. Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons redefined the collaborat­ion model when they came together to co-creative direct Prada, and spring/summer 2022 marks the first time the fruits of their joint labour are presented via a live runway show—and what a show it was! Staged simultaneo­usly in Milan and Shanghai, and broadcast side by side, it proved how collaborat­ion, when done correctly and with the best intent, can result in a synergy that is greater than the sum of its parts. The collection carries the imprints of both designers in equal measure. From Prada came an exploratio­n of modern womanhood and an intellectu­al dissection of its most enduring tropes; Simons’s hand, meanwhile, was all over the coolness, the minimalism, the sharp acidic palette, and the streamlini­ng of the message.

As Simons proves at Prada, sometimes, a fresh eye is what it takes to make something good even better. Nowhere is this more true than at Schiaparel­li and Mugler—two distinctiv­e but previously dormant brands that in recent years have been revitalise­d by the singular visions of their creative directors, Daniel Roseberry and Casey Cadwallade­r respective­ly. Though both brands are relatively small in the context of the contempora­ry fashion industry—neither belong to conglomera­tes or mega-companies with a correspond­ing mega budget—they have managed to create an outsized impact, which is all the more impressive when you take into considerat­ion that they don’t even show on the traditiona­l ready-to-wear calendar (Schiaparel­li focuses its efforts on couture, while Mugler operates on a see-now-buy-now model). Still, both have been dominating our Instagram feeds and spotted on the highest-profile personalit­ies on the planet. In the past year alone, Roseberry has won over fans such as Adele, Lady Gaga, Bella Hadid and Beyoncé, while Cadwallade­r has dressed the likes of Cardi B, Megan Thee Stallion, Dua Lipa and Miley Cyrus.

One reason for their resonance is that both designers have leaned into the illustriou­s heritage of their respective houses without being beholden to it. At Mugler, Cadwallade­r draws more from Manfred Thierry Mugler’s love of powerful femininity rather than his taste for theatrical­ity— filtering the late designer’s vision through a 21st-century lens of sexuality and inclusivit­y. At Schiaparel­li, Roseberry riffs on Elsa Schiaparel­li’s penchant for Surrealism and opulence, but in his hands (unlike some of his predecesso­rs’), the results are chic and never costumey. His latest couture collection, especially, is a breakthrou­gh for how it trades in his earlier extravagan­ce with silhouette and embellishm­ent for a more refined take on the brand’s codes. As Roseberry himself puts it, “I design in order to make people feel something.

It isn’t for the celebritie­s; it isn’t for the likes; it isn’t for the reviews. It’s because, when it’s done right, when it has something to tell us, it still has the power to move us.” That is what all the designers in this story share—anyone can awe and dazzle, but it takes a certain kind of genius to move hearts and minds, and ultimately, the proverbial needle forward.

 ?? ?? These are the designers taking the road less travelled towards bigger, brighter futures. By Jeffrey Yan
From top: Schiaparel­li haute couture spring/ summer 2022; LOEWE spring/ summer 2022
These are the designers taking the road less travelled towards bigger, brighter futures. By Jeffrey Yan From top: Schiaparel­li haute couture spring/ summer 2022; LOEWE spring/ summer 2022
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 ?? ?? Balenciaga spring/ summer 2022
Prada spring/ summer 2022
Balenciaga spring/ summer 2022 Prada spring/ summer 2022
 ?? ?? Mugler fall/winter 2021
Mugler fall/winter 2021

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