2012年9月19日星期三
Colin’s Column | Looking Back at London
LONDON, United Kingdom — Are we talking about London Fashion Week or a festival of childish self-indulgence? For me, fashion design is about cut, shape, body
and proportion, as it always has been. But sadly, many of the recent London shows featured banal shapes hidden under a riot of digitally created patterns,
sometimes in the crudest of colours. Just imagine if there was an embargo on the use of colour and pattern and designers had to show clothes in toile. We would
then see plainly just how bereft of technical skills some of the most lauded of London designers actually are.
The culprits are not only the young ones, but also experienced designers with long track records. Jasper Conran and John Rocha, for example, should be ashamed.
Although I do have some sympathy for them, as they must surely look at the kind of fashion that’s being hysterically praised in the press and think, ‘Oh, well,
what’s the point of having standards if nobody knows what they are any more?’
But enough preaching. Here’s what I liked most at the London shows.
My greatest pleasure from the week was seeing Christopher Kane come out blazing with confidence and present a collection that was perfectly judged, well cut and
completely controlled. I thought it was very beautiful and sophisticated — even witty. Indeed, the collection proved that Kane lives up to the hype and can
rightfully call himself a true force in London fashion.
Burberry’s Christopher Bailey is well up there at the top of the mountain and like a skilled climber, this season, he stood at the pinnacle and firmly planted
the brand’s flag as an international beacon for London fashion (the only one, currently) with a collection that was pitch perfect. The iridescent colours were
beautifully subtle and the trench has never looked so glamorous.
Which leaves Erdem, the only other designer worthy of serious comment this season. In the past, I worried that he was settling into a cosy routine of beautiful
fabrics and accommodating shapes. But this season, not a bit of it! His delicacy and sensitive assurance are still there, but with this show he advanced his
aesthetic as smoothly as a Maserati slips from one gear to the next. This man is a true designer. He doesn’t swing from one ostensibly new idea to another each
season, because he is mature enough to know who he is. His colours — strong but never crude — and his embroidery work distinguish him from the crowd.
For the rest, silence is the kindest thing, although I loved the prints at Antoni & Alison, who are celebrating the 25th anniversary of the label Antoni
Burakowski and Alison Roberts launched with £200 in 1987 and still enjoy a loyal following despite being largely ignored by the press. I also liked “Pomp and
Pleasure,” Anya Hindmarch’s witty presentation — orchestrated by Michael Howells with a long sideways look at Hogarth’s London — which had the audience, who
already love her bags, roaring with laughter, which is no small feat on the final day of a tiring fashion week. Also appealing were the crispness of Rag & Bone
in their brief, but totally modern guerrilla warfare of a show and the masterly tailoring and embroidery of Fyodor Golan.
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