In the nascent days of Parisian fashion, designers such as Charles Worth (in the late 19th-century) and Paul Poiret (in the early 20th-century) toyed with the possibility of presenting their garments in action. At the same time, Lady Duff-Gordon (designing under the moniker Lucile) was doing similar in London. Poiret, who was known for his opulent, flowing designs — settled on combining commerce with socialising, throwing a series of lavish balls where attendees were asked to come dressed in their finest. One of the most notable was The Thousand and Second Night party in 1911, where Poiret presented lampshade dresses and harem trousers.
By the 1920s and 1930s, Paris had become a hothouse of renowned names: from Coco Chanel’s understated ease to Elsa Schiaparelli’s surreal experiments to Madeleine Vionnet’s fluid draping. Shows became less of a big party, instead much smaller and more individualised: each fashion house would present their collections on a series of models, at exclusively client-only events. With anxiety high about designs being copied, these were closely guarded affairs. A world away from the constellation of cameras today, photographers were strictly not allowed.
It would take the aftermath of World War II for Paris’s fashion shows to become more regulated. In 1945, the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture stipulated that all couture houses had to seasonally present at least 35 night and day pieces. Garments were only available as made to measure, with a long process of ordering and fitting.
Paris was feeling nervous about the rising influence of New York’s fashion industry, where the war had encouraged support of US-based designers at their first Press Week in 1943. But the French capital had a secret weapon: Christian Dior. In 1947, Dior’s first collection — Corolle, which was attended by huge numbers of fashion press and was allowed to be photographed — helped to reset the sartorial agenda with exaggerated silhouettes. Doing away with the war’s boxy pragmatism, Dior’s New Look was all voluminous skirts, small waists and deliberate femininity. Over the next few years, Dior would help dictate the changing lines and shapes of womenswear, reestablishing Paris’s mood alongside contemporaries, such as Hubert de Givenchy, Pierre Balmain, and Jacques Fath.
In the 1960s, another name — one who’d cut his design teeth at the house of Dior — would emerge: Yves Saint Laurent. Launching a prêt-à-porter line in 1966, including his much-adored tuxedo suit, Saint Laurent signalled another shift in mood, where the focus was firmly ensconced in youth culture (reflected in the ‘space age’ collections of Pierre Cardin and André Courrèges, the latter encouraging his models to move naturally, as suited the clothes). Ready-to-wear was the way forward.
The first official Paris Fashion Week happened in 1973 with the formation of the Fédération Française de la Couture, and opened with the game-changing Battle of Versailles Fashion Show. This fight — of the sartorial variety only — saw the historic tensions between Paris and New York fashion brought to life on stage as five of the biggest French designers were pitted against five unknown Americans. The event, which was a fundraiser to restore the Palace of Versailles, featured Yves Saint Laurent, Emanuel Ungaro, Christian Dior (then designed by Marc Bohan), Pierre Cardin and Hubert de Givenchy on the French side, against Anne Klein, Halston, Oscar de la Renta, Bill Blass and Stephen Burrows representing America. Despite the theatrics, including rhino-led caravans and Cinderella-style pumpkin coaches from the French, it was the Americans, with their predominantly African-American model line-up and an appearance from Liza Minnelli, who are widely accepted as the winners.
From then on, the shows only became more audacious, from Thierry Mugler’s 1984 extravaganza at Le Zenith stadium (with an audience of 6,000) to Jean Paul Gaultier’s show stopping conical bra, which debuted the same year and was made famous by Madonna when she wore his designs for her 1990 Blonde Ambition tour. Chanel’s self-referential revival at the hands of Karl Lagerfeld in the 1980s yielded plenty of memorable runway moments, while the establishment of a new wave of Japanese designers including Yohji Yamamoto and Comme Des Garçons led to revolutionary ways of thinking when it came to style.
The 1990s saw British designer exports to Paris, from John Galliano, who became artistic director at Dior in 1996 to Alexander McQueen at Givenchy (1996-2001). While, more recently, in July 2019, Stella McCartney joined forces with French luxury group LVMH to up the stakes in sustainable high-fashion.
Today, Paris’s shows are more dramatic than ever. As custom-built sets are now the norm for many brands, Paris Fashion Week has seen backdrops replicating train stations to supermarkets, airports to merry-go-rounds. Plenty of these ambitious settings came courtesy of the late Karl Lagerfeld’s tenure at Chanel, each season attempting to top the last. Elsewhere, look to Louis Vuitton, Balenciaga and Rick Owens for theatricality – the latter presented human backpacks for his SS16 show. It’s a different city to the one where Poiret was hosting dances more than 100 years ago, but still — that distinct Parisian drama is never to be outdone.
0 Yorumlar