Hermès parties Dwntwn
Less than 72 hours after the final footfalls crossed the catwalks of Paris Fashion Week, they started up again in downtown Los Angeles, thanks to storied French luxury label Hermès, which presented its spring/summer 2017 men’s collection March 9 to some 1,500 celebrity guests, stylists, social inf luencers, VIP customers and bold-faced names from L.A.’s creative community, some of whom could be spotted modeling the spring/summer looks in the show, including Commune co-founder Roman Alonso and Museum of Contemporary Art Director Philippe Vergne.
A reprise of the runway collection men’s artistic director Véronique Nichanian showed in Paris in June, this one included lots of luxe, supple leather — jackets, trousers and even a cardigan sweater silhouette — as well as easy-wearing tailored pieces and light outerwear. Some of the standout pieces bore a fun tie-dye pattern, while others made a lasting impression thanks to the color — a shade of bright yellow that made its way onto varsity jackets, Tshirts, trousers, bags and a camouflage pattern that appeared to involve horses.
The show, which ended to the strains of the Beatles’ “All You Need Is Love,” was just the beginning of a full-on multimedia, multiroom, night-long happening Hermès dubbed Dwntwn Men that saw the Chinatown warehouse space divided into a half-dozen themed interactive spaces that guests wandered while snacking on caviar, foie gras, oysters on the half shell and freely flowing Champagne.
The theme of each room was conveyed via slogans that had been incorporated into the décor. Created by graphic artist Anthony Burrill (a past collaborator with the brand), they included “Give the Joy Back,” which graced a room full of arcade games and basketball-toss machines; “Please Do Touch,” for a room that displayed materials used by the house — knits, leathers and the like — in museum-like frames; and “Shake Me Up!”, a semicircle-shaped room that looked like an old-school record store. (Only the album sleeves depicted silk scarf prints from past seasons with the name of the design, the designer and the season appearing on the album’s center label. A blue and white graph-paperlike design, “Quadrill’H” from the spring/summer 2006 collection was designed by Franck Mouteault, for example; and “Horse Power,” a black and white design consisting of tiny, emoji-like horses and cars was created by Gianpaolo Pagni.)
Among the notable members of the fashion flock spotted in the scrum were stylists Elizabeth Stewart, Jeanne Yang, Brad Goreski and George Kotsiopoulos; cashmere wunderkind Greg Chait; florist to the famous Eric Buterbaugh; Magasin co-owner Josh Peskowitz; and burlesque queen Dita Von Teese. In addition to Alonso and Vergne, L.A. movers and shakers hitting the Hermès runway for the event included Alma restaurant’s chef Ari Taymor, artist Kori Newkirk and architect Mark Lee.
After negotiating the series of immersive-experience rooms, partygoers spilled out into an open-air backyard-meets-patio-meet-concert space where the Cold War Kids would hold a miniconcert. Ringed with food trucks courtesy of Jon Shook and Vinny Dotolo’s Petit Trois and Animal, the party space included neon cactuses stashed in the shrubbery, a half-dozen blue klieg lights stabbing the inky black sky and a vintage-style light-up sign declaring, apropos of nothing, “It All Makes Sense.”
Despite the enthusiastic signage to the contrary, we’re not 100% sure it did all make sense. But as a one-of-a-kind exercise in luxurybrand buzz-building, it could hardly have been more memorable.
Ringed with food trucks, the party space included neon cactuses and a vintage-style light-up sign declaring, apropos of nothing, ‘It All Makes Sense.’