PARIS â When Rick Owens said, âItâs hard to do shows in my house in Paris without thinking where it started,â he wasnât only talking about 25 years ago, when he first landed in Paris. He was also thinking about who heâd wanted to be after he escaped his hometown Porterville, California, and moved to LA in the late â70s. âMy entire aesthetic is probably a reaction to an oppressive, intolerant upbringing,â he mused before his presentation on Thursday. Whatever utopian ideal he aspired to in his misspent youth, he can look around at âthis tolerant, inclusive, eerie, elegant lifeâ he has made for himself and think, ânot bad. I made some kind of headway.â And the motivation came from Porterville, so thatâs what he called his show. He lettered the name on hooded ponchos in a font that mixed art deco Hollywood marquee and skater culture. Tolerant, inclusive.
With a huge retrospective upcoming at the Musée Galliera in Paris, Rick realised that some of his early work has been lost, so he recreated it for âPorterville.â The first pieces he ever made on Hollywood Boulevard were cut from army blankets he bought in the surplus store. Here, they were duplicated in hooded capes cut from Austrian loden felted with purified melt water from the Dachstein glacier. Elegant. Possibly eerie too. Like the fishtailed Hollywood goddess gowns that have been an Owens go-to since his early days. His models moved like imperious queens of outer space, their statuesque quality amplified by the leather âduvetâ boots that expanded their lower leg (a more glamorous version of the inflatable rubbers that anchored his menâs show in January).
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The âspacesuitsâ came from those early days too, cashmere or felted alpaca bodystockings wrapped in hooded robes or ponchos, or a glorious serpentine tangle of top. The show closed with a handful of models ensnared in tubular webs of rubber hosing. Red carpets on Arrakis beckoned. Believe it or not, Owensâs autobiography was woven into such pieces. His father wouldnât let him watch TV but he read him pulpy science fantasies by Edgar Rice Burroughs â space queens and space beasts and heroes in intergalactic loincloths â and played him operas by Wagner and Puccini (âMadam Butterfly?â Rapturous music and death!â). That was part of the Porterville crucible that formed Richard Saturnino Owens, and now, as the fashion worldâs most successful independent designer, there is no one who can stop him turning it all into gold.
Showing in the intimate human cocoon of home was Owensâs reaction to the barbarism that has been unleashed in the world. Itâs also a consolidation of new commitments. For the first time, heâs taking French lessons: every morning at 11, five days a week. Heâs three weeks in and so far heâs exulting in being able to say, âI hate umbrellas, a raincoat with a hood is sufficient,â in French. Owens has also realised that he has committed to his house in Paris. âWow! This is where Iâm gonna get old. So Iâm like, âIâve gotta get those windows done.ââ Porterville to Paris, womb to tomb.
Rick Owens and Jonathan Anderson are compatible spirits, so it wasnât a stretch that they should both be thinking about homes. One of Andersonâs subtexts with his new collection for Loewe (remembering that Anderson is the most subtextual of designers) was what ends up in the interiors of peopleâs houses, especially the wealthy who allow decorators to dress their homes for them. Once they might have been aristocrats, now theyâre just rich. The world post-âSaltburn,â in other words.
Special guests for Fridayâs Loewe show arrived in limousines (Catherine OâHara stepped out of a Rolls), a piece of performance art to go with Andersonâs concept. The courtyard of the Chateau de Vincennes was laid out as a set of spacious rooms, painted a uniform patrician green. The walls were hung with small paintings by Albert York, a reclusive artist who was a favourite of Jackie Kennedyâs, in the black, folk-ish frames he favoured for his pictures. (The little landscape featured on the invitation is in Andersonâs collection.)
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The clothes elaborated on Andersonâs idea of a tremulous aristocracy. He started with a morning coat, a staple for schoolboys at Eton, where they are taught that global domination is their birthright, but Anderson reconfigured it for women. He added elongated swallowtails and for the last look, he beaded the whole thing, even the pinstripes on the accompanying pants, so that it looked like it had been painted with caviar. You can take it for granted now that there will be some transformative craft element in everything Anderson does. Here, substantial coats were collared in carved wood which had been gilded to look like metal. All the prints were beaded, including the lettuce leaves and asparagus spears on handbags. They had a kind of olde worlde preciousness about them. At the same time, they were as quintessentially surreal as the shoes made of straps.
That disconnect is one of Andersonâs trump cards. In his own collection, he dropped weird granny wigs on his modelsâ heads. Familiar, but totally twisted. Here, the head gear was a glossy black toupé, with a hit of crazy colour in the bangs. Same thing. His florals looked like drawing room wallpaper but he cut them into a halter-top that hung onto its skirt with a mean-looking leather belt. When he raised panniers high up on the torso, they were like fledgling wings for flying away. But my favourite flourish was the chunk of crystal laid across one shoulder like a huge see-through slug. Ours not to reason why with the Anderson challenge.
The other trump card is his commercial savvy. Fact is, the logic-defying verve of Andersonâs clothes generates heat. The harem/combat pant combo is going to be everywhere.