Los Angeles Times

THE ART OF THE HEEL

Footwear visions make a fine art in the ‘Killer Heels’ exhibition in Palm Springs

- BOOTH MOORE booth.moore@latimes.com

SPRINGS — Ladies, the next time you are teetering on high heels, you can blame men. But not for the reason you think.

In Western fashion, high heels were popularize­d by men, starting in the court of Louis XIV where a

talon rouge (red heel), identified a member of the privileged class centuries before Christian Louboutin made red soles the calling card of his luxury shoe brand.

That’s just one of the tasty tidbits in “Killer Heels: The Art of the High-Heeled Shoe,” an exhibition scheduled to run through Dec. 13 at the Palm Springs Art Museum that examines the fashion accessory we all love to hate, including its history, its relation to gender identity, sex appeal and power.

Originally organized by the Brooklyn Museum, the show features a dazzling array of stilettos, wedges and platforms. There are more than 110 contempora­ry styles by Louboutin, Manolo Blahnik, Prada, Alexander McQueen, Céline, Jean Paul Gaultier and Maison Martin Margiela, alongside iconic 20th century designs from Salvatore Ferragamo, Roger Vivier, Andre Perugia and more.

Conceptual shoes in mind-boggling, space-agey shapes by architect Zaha Hadid, artist Masaya Kushino, designers Iris van Herpen, United Nude and Noritaka Tatehana sit next to dainty historical court shoes and Chinese slippers dating to the 17th century.

Browsing the vitrines, it becomes evident how much fashion is rooted in the past. For example, heel-less shoes existed long before Lady Gaga started wearing them, as evidenced by a pair of 1940 Victor ruby red suede platform sandals with carved out heels that would fit right in on the red carpet today.

Thigh-high boots have been a tool of seduction for even longer, judging from a super-sexy red Maniatis Bottier pair, dotted with black buttons, from 1920s Paris.

And celebritie­s have given a legup to popular shoe styles since the dawn of Hollywood. Hence, the exhibition’s most prized artifact: a pair of black Ferragamo stilettos from 1959 worn by Marilyn Monroe. On loan from the Ferragamo Museum in Florence, they may or may not have one of the heels shaved down, which legend has it Monroe did to exaggerate her famous sway.

“Extreme, elevated shoe design is nothing new, and it’s definitely not unique to the early 21st century,” said curator Lisa Small, pointing out that platforms have signified a woman’s status and identity in Asian cultures for centuries. “I do think we have reached a moment because fashion has become so much more flamboyant, and runway shows so much about spectacle and theater, that designers try to see who can do the biggest, tallest thing.”

The pinnacle of fashion’s recent extreme shoe fascinatio­n undoubtedl­y came in 2010 with McQueen’s famous Armadillo boots, named for their armor-like appearance.

“That was the shoe that brought to many people’s consciousn­ess the epic craziness that was happening in shoe design,” said Small. It was also the one shoe she couldn’t get for the exhibition, she thinks probably because all the pairs were being used in the McQueen retrospect­ive, “Savage Beauty,” which broke attendance records at the Victoria and Albert in London earlier this year.

But there are plenty of other designs that suggest a similar metamorpho­sis of the foot — into a mythical creature (Walter Steiger’s horn-heeled Unicorn Tayss, 2013), a horse’s hoof (Iris Schieferst­ein’s furry Horse Shoes 3, 2006), a tea cup (Miu Miu’s Surrealist Ortensia and Oro platform lace-ups, 2008).

The exhibition shows that shoes can be exquisite design objects, as worthy of decorating a mantel as a foot. (In fact, the intricatel­y carved gilded heels on Perugia’s 1928 evening sandals and Miu Miu’s 2006 wedges resemble filigree rococo molding on a mantel.)

Shoe designers often borrow arPALM chitectura­l motifs (like the inverted Eiffel Tower heel on a 2001 Jean Paul Gaultier shoe, for example). And architects dip their toes in shoe design. Hadid’s 2013 striated silver, 3-D printed fiberglass Nova shoes for United Nude echo the cantilever­ed look of her Library and Learning Centre for the University of Vienna. The heel on Rem D. Koolhaas’ 2004 Eamz shoe for United Nude echoes the design of an Eames side chair.

As much as footwear references the past, it also reflects our vision of the future. Designs hint at flight and speed with springs (the midcentury Satellite jumping shoe), shooting flames (Prada’s 2012 wedge sandal) and blade heels (Chau Har Lee’s 2010 stiletto). They are made using cutting-edge techniques and fabricatio­ns (Threeasfou­r’s white carbon fiber and plastic, 3-D printed wedge, 2013), and can even become symbols of political change (Kushino’s 2012 Healing Fukushima heels that plant radiation-leeching seeds as the wearer walks).

But what will become of the high heel with the dawn of the comfort shoe revolution in fashion, when Birkenstoc­ks and sneakers have proliferat­ed on the runways, the streets and even the red carpet?

“I don’t think high heels will ever be over,” Small said. “Unless there’s a dramatic change in the cultural and social investment into what high heels symbolize, they will never go away.”

 ?? Photograph­s of Christian Louboutin Printz, from top, and Aperlaï Geisha Lines shoes by Jay Zukerkorn ??
Photograph­s of Christian Louboutin Printz, from top, and Aperlaï Geisha Lines shoes by Jay Zukerkorn
 ?? Jay Zukerkorn
Christian Louboutin
Jay Zukerkorn Winde Rienstra
Jay Zukerkorn United Nude
Jay Zukerkorn Chau Har Lee ?? METROPOLIS by Christian Louboutin, left, and Beyond Wilderness from Iris van Herpen X United Nude. WINDE RIENSTRA’S Bamboo Heels with plastic cable ties, left, and stainless-steel Blade Heel by Chau Har Lee.
Jay Zukerkorn Christian Louboutin Jay Zukerkorn Winde Rienstra Jay Zukerkorn United Nude Jay Zukerkorn Chau Har Lee METROPOLIS by Christian Louboutin, left, and Beyond Wilderness from Iris van Herpen X United Nude. WINDE RIENSTRA’S Bamboo Heels with plastic cable ties, left, and stainless-steel Blade Heel by Chau Har Lee.
 ?? Jay Zukerkorn Walter Steiger ?? HEELS throw a curve in Walter Steiger’s Unicorn Tayss from 2013.
Jay Zukerkorn Walter Steiger HEELS throw a curve in Walter Steiger’s Unicorn Tayss from 2013.
 ?? Sarah DeSantis Brooklyn Museum ?? A CHINESE satin-weave silk Manchu woman’s shoe is from the 19th century.
Sarah DeSantis Brooklyn Museum A CHINESE satin-weave silk Manchu woman’s shoe is from the 19th century.
 ?? Jay Zukerkorn Prada USA Corp. ?? PRADA’S 2012 wedge sandal is a fiery design.
Jay Zukerkorn Prada USA Corp. PRADA’S 2012 wedge sandal is a fiery design.

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