Houston Chronicle

Shades of gray worth watching

- By Vaneessa Friedman |

PARIS — Forget lapel pins or white roses or black; the Oscars drew a line in that sand, anyway. Sunday night in Paris, Thom Browne made an utterly convincing statement about female strength and sexuality. He may have been an ocean away from Los Angeles, but it was as theatrical as any film, and as potent.

It began in a vast ballroom of the Hôtel de Ville, Paris’ city hall, with a central island filled with canvases propped up on easels. Out came a procession of painters — imaginary doppelgäng­ers of Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, Marie Antoinette’s favorite portrait painter and a woman who made her way in a man’s world — in beige jackets and gray bloomers, the legs exaggerate­d to hoop-skirt size, their hair jutting back in towering cones.

As they began to daub, their visions appeared: women drawn in multiple shades of gray and an eye-boggling amount of detail; women whose bodies were both art and artifice, a wink and a smile, inscribed in strips of tweed and astrakhan, threads sketching the form beneath, pearls encircling nipples and fur rosettes at the crotch. Their corsets were visible under sheer scrims of chiffon set into flannel jackets, marbleized sequins monumental­izing flesh.

Half a jacket hung from a shoulder and met half a molded slip dress; suit jackets covered in minute ruffles trailed on the floor like a train. At the end, each model stood haloed in a square of neon light, and to Baha Men’s “Who Let the Dogs Out,” four men in (yes) dog masks, gray flannel suits and high heels appeared, leashed together and led by a figure in a long, gray rose-covered robe.

After circling the room, they arrived at a throne of sorts, and the attendants removed the robe, revealing the South Sudanese model Grace Bol in her own gray flannel pantsuit. She took the throne, the music changed to Carly Simon’s “Let the River Run,” the anthem at the end of the 1988 film “Working Girl,” and it was done.

It was less a fetishizat­ion of the female body (an approach that would be questionab­le at this point in time) than a demand for recognitio­n of the feminist form with a touch of levity. There’s been some rumbling this red carpet season about women taking political positions in evening gowns while still exploiting their “assets” — as The Daily Mail says — in the classic cleavage-and-curves way. Browne backhanded that out of the room.

There’s a revolt of sorts happening at the tail end of a fraught fashion month. Designers seem increasing­ly unwilling to shut their mouths and just make pretty clothes. This is their soapbox, and they’re speechifyi­ng with their seams.

As Pierpaolo Piccioli said, leaning in with some unexpected urgency before a verdant Valentino show, held on the same day Italy went to the polls: “Very often if you make clothes you feel are doing something that is not really meaningful for society, but I feel you can use clothes to deliver a message. Italy right now is choosing whether to embrace discrimina­tion, and I hate all forms of discrimina­tion.”

That’s why he opened his show with the Sudanese model Adut Akech, and closed it with the Afro-French Assa Baradji, and used his work to prove that romanticis­m — not about relationsh­ips, but about life — could be a strength rather than a weakness. The clichés of the genre (flowers, pink), were turned into power symbols: Pansies in black and white and caramel appeared as intarsia on wool tunics and capes and knee-high leather boots with stacked heels, so instead of being merely decorative they were built into the structure of the garment.

Eschewing the stereotype­s of strength that have been so dominant this season (big shoulders, ‘80s references), Piccioli chose instead to express freedom through ease, cutting flowing tunics in red and deep pink and leafy greens, scalloping the edges and pairing them with neat pressed trousers, allowing hands to be plunged deep in pockets, heads held high.

It’s hard to add this kind of dimension to fashion. You can easily fall over the edge into pretentiou­sness or fakery. And not everyone is comfortabl­e with the idea: At Akris, Albert Kriemler’s liquid C-suite leathers, knits and silks in jade and lapis lazuli remained quiet in their confidence; at Sacai, Chitose Abe stuck to her usual cut-and-paste of forms and fabrics (school blazers, down jackets, tennis sweaters, chiffon), with her usual, if occasional­ly overcompli­cated, aplomb. When she first introduced this “hybridizat­ion” approach, she was ahead of the curve. Now the curve is moving on a bit; so, hopefully, will she.

But when it works — as it did at Valentino wonderfull­y well, and as it did at Stella McCartney, where the suit linings became the stuff of slip dresses false-fronted onto velvet and knits, and portraits of women by British artist J.H. Lynch were revealed under sheer lace and tulle shirts, the normally unseen elevated and exposed to the light — it raises the bar for everyone.

 ??  ?? Models present creations by Thom Browne before the 2018/2019 fall/winter collection fashion show in Paris. Browne’s collection made a stunning statement about female strength and sexuality.
Models present creations by Thom Browne before the 2018/2019 fall/winter collection fashion show in Paris. Browne’s collection made a stunning statement about female strength and sexuality.
 ?? Francois Guillot / AFP / Getty Images ??
Francois Guillot / AFP / Getty Images

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