The Guardian (USA)

Why 2024 will be the year of ‘curated chaos’

- Chloe Mac Donnell

Greasy hair, overspilli­ng bags and crumpled clothing. The mood on the spring/ summer 2024 catwalks last September was anything but polished. Who cares, some might say. But after having stealth wealth shoved in our faces for months, this was quite a vibe shift.

Fashion is often hailed as a clairvoyan­t, using its hemlines and, more recently, hairline indexes to predict everything from economic downturns to rises in populism. While it would be unwise to rely on it as a sole indicator of the general direction in which the world is going, just like music and art, fashion does indeed reflect the times we are living. And for 2024, that mirror effect is looking quite distorted.

To put it frankly, it’s chaotic. But it’s not exactly chaos. Instead, it’s a type of curated chaos as celebritie­s, influencer­s and brands attempt to be more relatable through faux realism.

The paradigms of this shifting zeitgeist are abundant. It’s models walking down the catwalk with unzipped, overflowin­g bags cradled under their arms at Miu Miu. Look a bit closer and you realise this so-called parapherna­lia is only a singular high heel poking out and some stylish branded pants. A real commuter knows the reality is orangestai­ned Tupperware, smelly gym socks and a half-squashed box of tampons that will inevitably fall out.

Then there’s GQ putting Kim Kardashian on the front cover of its men of the year issue eating a bag of Cheetos while wearing an expensive, luxe suit.

While she’s supposedly licking orange dust off her thumb, the rest of her fingers remain clean – an impossible feat, anyone who has eaten the corn-puff snacks will know.

Not to be outdone, her half-sister Kylie Jenner promotes her debut clothing line, KHY, while posing with a halfeaten burger and can of Coke. The burger is carefully sliced rather than gnawed at and there is not a trace of sauce on Jenner’s meticulous­ly lined lips. Another dead giveaway? Full fat rather than Diet Coke.

On and on these neatly drawn up plans of simulated disarray go.

It’s happening online, too. Gone are well-lit DSLR photos of avocado on toast. In their place are blurry shots of smeared dinner plates and wine stained tablecloth­s and plenty of unfiltered crying.

This laissez-faire attitude is spearheade­d by influencer­s such as the 22year-old Emma Chamberlai­n, who the New York Times says “invented the way people talk on YouTube … particular­ly the way they communicat­e authentici­ty”. Then there’s Julia Fox, who has been known to embrace slob style.

“Everyone is a little scared of being too perfect online,” says Rachel Lee, a global insights strategist at the Londonbase­d agency the Digital Fairy. “We have reached the tipping point. Being messy is now the default.”

This new chaotic mood is less of a surge and more of a gradual shift. In December last year the public chose “goblin mode” as its Oxford word of 2022. The term refers to “a type of behaviour which is unapologet­ically self-indulgent, lazy, slovenly, or greedy, typically in a way that rejects social norms or expectatio­ns”. Then this summer “bed rotting” became popularise­d. Hailed as a form of self care by gen Z, it advocated for shunning productivi­ty and instead lying in bed all day. There’s also been “feral girl summer” and “ugly core” with grotesque rather than neat nails.

Some hail it as echoing a wider tumultuous mood. Lee describes it as “a coping mechanism” yet also a backlash against the “clean girl” and “boss bitch” aesthetics of being carefully controlled and advocating for 4am starts, latte dressing and mouth taping. “There’s an idea of undoneness. It’s an evolution from the blinginess of Y2K to its darker side. People are co-opting the messy aesthetic side of it. It’s an almost fatalistic attitude. That ‘I don’t care if I look bad, the world is burning anyway.’”

However, just as millennial pink, doughnut walls and terrazzo tiles became synonymous with a certain Instagram look, curated chaos is not without its own style signifiers. It may be hailed as an anti-aesthetic but it is still an aesthetic. Every blurred selfie involves taking a selfie. Every photo dump means selecting and ordering up to 10 images from a camera roll. On TikTok there are even guides on how to curate a feed that looks messy.

The fact that brands and individual­s are now co-opting it to sell product feels even more chaotic. Ultimately, the aesthetic should come with a caveat: buyer beware, authentici­ty cannot be bought.

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 ?? ?? Influencer Julia Fox’s curated laissezfai­re style. Photograph: Rachpoot/BauerGriff­in/GC Images
Influencer Julia Fox’s curated laissezfai­re style. Photograph: Rachpoot/BauerGriff­in/GC Images
 ?? ?? Kim Kardashian on the cover of GQ with Cheetos. Photograph: Jack Bridgland/GQ
Kim Kardashian on the cover of GQ with Cheetos. Photograph: Jack Bridgland/GQ

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