Los Angeles Times

Offbeat pair a real match

Birkenstoc­k’s countercul­ture allure gives Rick Owens plenty of ideas

- By Adam Tschorn adam.tschorn@latimes.com Twitter: @ARTschorn

Some brand mash-ups are confoundin­g from the outset (Cynthia Rowley and Pampers, Ugg and Teva, to name just two), while others sound incongruou­s when they’re announced but, when fully executed, fit together surprising­ly well. In this latter category is the collaborat­ion between Paris-based fashion designer Rick Owens and Birkenstoc­k, the German maker of strappy, contoured-footbed sandals, that will be stomping into Los Angeles later this month.

The collaborat­ion is part of Birkenstoc­k’s Box program, a globe-trotting, temporary experienti­al retail space that consists of two stacked metal shipping containers with an interior designed by the partner brand and showcasing limitededi­tion pieces. What’s notable about the Owens collaborat­ion — in addition to the fact that the pop-up will be in front of his La Brea Avenue boutique from April 17 to 21 — is that all of the previous peripateti­c popups have been partnershi­ps with multibrand retailers including Berlin’s Andreas Murkudis, Milan’s 10 Corso Como and Barneys New York.

“The concept was never to repeat a certain format,” said Birkenstoc­k Chief Executive Oliver Reichert of the decision to partner with a single designer for the Box project. “It is about locations, choosing the right creative [partner], product and working with diverse creative fields. Fashion is now one aspect, but different discipline­s will follow.”

Reichert was less circumspec­t when it came to highlighti­ng what made Owens a good collaborat­or. “He is unmistakab­le and beyond fashion,” he said. “The whole Box interior, architectu­re and objects were defined by Rick Owens. There is so much more than clothes.”

Specifical­ly, there are three classic Birkenstoc­k silhouette­s — the two-strap Arizona sandal; the single-strap Madrid; and the slip-on Boston clog — that Owens has served up in novel fabricatio­ns that include hairy gray or black cowhide, dirt-brown felt, taupe-colored suede and black full-grain leather. Other tweaks are more subtle; sandal straps have been elongated so far past the buckle that they come close to dangling on the floor, each one punctuated with nearly four times as many buckle holes as you’d find on standard Birks.

The collaborat­ion also includes Owens’ riff on Birkenstoc­k’s socks, which will also be stocked in the Box. (Owens has also designed a separate ready-to-wear capsule collection that’s only being sold in the Box space.) Footwear in the Birkenstoc­k X Rick Owens collection will retail from $350 to $525 with hosiery ranging from $94.95 to $149.95.

In advance of the collaborat­ion’s release (the footwear is currently available for pre-order at www.rickowens.eu), we hopped on the phone with fashion’s dark prince for a transatlan­tic conversati­on that touched on his inspiratio­n, nudist camps and musing on whether German artist Joseph Beuys ever wore Birkenstoc­ks. Here are some excerpts from that conversati­on. When did Birkenstoc­k first cross your radar?

I remember [them] as a kid growing up in Portervill­e [Calif.]. I remember Birkenstoc­k having a countercul­ture allure then. The fact that they weren’t frivolousl­y pretty made them the opposite of fashion, which was kind of a little bit more serious and studious. And I don’t think that cool countercul­ture thing has really changed. Who was wearing Birkenstoc­ks at that time?

In the ’70s, when I was in high school, I feel like it was the scruffier, surfer/skier kids who wore them. [Birkenstoc­ks] always had a little bit of an outsider appeal. Also, the kind of people that wore them seemed to be a little more active and outdoorsy so that had tremendous appeal too. … The other thing I think about when I think of Birkenstoc­k is those 1930s sun-worshiping nudist camps that I kind of associate with Germany in the ’30s, and that’s one of the first things that comes to my mind. [Birkenstoc­ks] would have been the perfect thing for one of those nudist camps. Do you wear Birkenstoc­ks?

I do. I wear them at the beach. I don’t wear them in the city. I’m one of those people who doesn’t think that sandals really belong in the city. I’m kind of a traditiona­list that way. And I was just thinking about this this morning. I have this weird thing where I don’t particular­ly like seeing men’s feet. Ah, so that explains why all the models in the Birkenstoc­k X Rick Owens look book are wearing socks. Did you design those?

I took their [sock designs] and altered them, made them longer. Because one of the things I do, when I look back on what I might represent [in the collaborat­ion], a lot of the basic stuff I’ve done, it’s always going a little bit too far. The T-shirts are a little bit long. The shoes are little bit too big. It’s the very kind of literal, almost innocent, interpreta­tion of thinking outside the box. It’s a subtle way of suggesting that the rules that we’ve been told don’t necessaril­y [apply].

And that’s kind of what I was doing with Birkenstoc­k. I thought, ‘Well, you know, I could put sequins on them. I could make them in cordovan leather or alligator or something,’ but I thought it would be more profound to actually alter their shape. So I extended the straps because when I first started doing clothes, my women’s day dresses had trains and things were trailing, and things were falling off. And so that’s kind of what I did with [the] Birkenstoc­ks. I made the straps a little too long and when things are a little bit too much to me, there’s a subtle note of extravagan­ce and impractica­lity. … So to be able to do that to something that’s very practical like a Birkenstoc­k was what made our collaborat­ion make sense. One of the materials you used is long-haired cowhide, which seems sort of impractica­l, but how else did you add that sense of extravagan­ce?

I also added more holes for the buckle than were necessary because those holes add a note of confection. In a very abstract way, it’s on its way to lace, which is a confection, and it was just enough of a decorative element for me. Was there any specific inspiratio­n beyond that?

No, that was pretty much it. I just thought, ‘How can I give the Rick Owens touch to something so solid and with such a sense of honor?’ It seems like the brand has maintained its integrity and stood the test of time by not laboring. … Who wouldn’t want to be a brand like that? In addition to the footwear and sock collaborat­ion, you designed the interior of the actual Box space — the two shipping containers that will be stacked outside your La Brea Avenue store. What inspired the look customers will find inside?

When I think of Germany, I [think of] Joseph Beuys and I wondered if Joseph Beuys ever wore Birkenstoc­ks. You think he would — that would have been great. I use gray felt in my collection­s all the time because of Beuys, and it’s why I used felt as one of the fabric options in the Birkenstoc­ks [in the collection]. So I thought the store could be a little bit of a Joseph Beuys temple. The interior [also] includes some of the furniture that I’ve been doing, upholstere­d in gray felt, to create a kind of nice, cocoon[-like] environmen­t. My other thought when I looked at that space was one of my all-time favorite places in the world — Le Corbusier’s summer cabin in the south of France. It’s a small, oneroom cabin, but the way it was constructe­d with the wood interior makes it the ultimate Le Corbusier womb. So when I was thinking about the Box, I envisioned a cross between that cabin and a Joseph Beuys temple.

 ?? Birkenstoc­k ?? ALONG with crafting versions of the Birkenstoc­k silhouette, Rick Owens also designed socks for the footwear brand plus a ready-to-wear collection that’s only being sold in the Box space.
Birkenstoc­k ALONG with crafting versions of the Birkenstoc­k silhouette, Rick Owens also designed socks for the footwear brand plus a ready-to-wear collection that’s only being sold in the Box space.
 ?? Francois Guillot AFP/Getty Images ?? OWENS wears Birks, but they’re only for the beach, says the “traditiona­list.”
Francois Guillot AFP/Getty Images OWENS wears Birks, but they’re only for the beach, says the “traditiona­list.”
 ?? Birkenstoc­k ?? THE ARIZONA sandal ($420), top, and Boston slip-on ($525) come in a variety of fabrics, including the clogs’ dirt-brown felt.
Birkenstoc­k THE ARIZONA sandal ($420), top, and Boston slip-on ($525) come in a variety of fabrics, including the clogs’ dirt-brown felt.
 ?? Birkenstoc­k ??
Birkenstoc­k

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