WWD Digital Daily

Rei Kawakubo Strips Down Window Dressing

“I like people to enter the shop with a sense of anticipati­on, having felt already at the entrance the shop's concept and CDG's way of thinking,” the Japanese fashion maverick told WWD.

- BY MILES SOCHA

Rei Kawakubo's deep thoughts about window display are a revelation.

In an email exchange with WWD, the Japanese fashion designer behind

Comme des Garçons summed up why she's no fan of standard-fare window dressing, confirming her stature as one of the industry's most unorthodox, gutsy and indie-minded figures — and a retail trailblaze­r.

“Displaying clothes in a window is, for me, like saying, ‘Hey, look at me. Please buy me; I'm wonderful,'” she related. “I don't want to beg people to buy something. My ideal is that people search for, discover and then choose the clothes they want to wear, having thought about it and felt something by themselves, on their own.”

A new 302-page book — published mainly for internal use but also offered to VIP clients and friends of the Japanese fashion firm — documents the installati­ons Kawakubo has conceived for Comme des Garçons' flagship store in Tokyo's Aoyama from 1989 through to 2023.

They reflect a staggering array of moods, materials and concepts designed to challenge the eye — and the brain.

Over the years, Kawakubo has also

featured artworks by the likes of Christian

Marclay, Roger

Ballen, Cindy Sherman, Ai Weiwei, Taro Okamoto, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Richard Prince and Gilbert & George.

“I like trying to make a stimulatin­g and interestin­g atmosphere around the entrance that leads you to go inside the shop where you would happen to find some clothes in the back. At the least, I want the windows or entrance of the shops to have the role of a kind of ‘press room,'” Kawakubo said, characteri­zing her installati­ons as a forum for communicat­ing ideas and messages different from her runway shows. “If after more than 40 years, people still remember something from that experience, then for me it is merit enough. I believe that, in business, you have to try things that don't necessaril­y result in immediate sales.”

Kawakubo has a reputation for swimming against the tide, and constantly challengin­g herself to invent fashions that have never been seen before — and stores that break the mold.

“Building a shop involves the same creation as making clothes,” she

explained. “I like people to enter the shop with a sense of anticipati­on, having felt already at the entrance the shop's concept and CDG's way of thinking. In this respect, the image of the shop has to be on the same level as that of the clothes, so that people can encounter something stimulatin­g, something never seen before, something new.”

 ?? ?? Street art by Pokras Lampas obscures the windows of the Comme des Garçons boutique in Tokyo's Aoyama district.
An elephant artwork by Stephanie Quayle lorded over the entrance to the Aoyama boutique in 2011.
Street art by Pokras Lampas obscures the windows of the Comme des Garçons boutique in Tokyo's Aoyama district. An elephant artwork by Stephanie Quayle lorded over the entrance to the Aoyama boutique in 2011.
 ?? ?? A spread from the book showing artist Steven Pippin's multiple sliding glass doors.
A spread from the book showing artist Steven Pippin's multiple sliding glass doors.
 ?? ?? A giant orb was installed for “Red Celebratio­n” in 2015.
A giant orb was installed for “Red Celebratio­n” in 2015.

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