Tag Archives: Dorothée Perret

CELINE — SPRING 2019

It’s almost midnight in Paris. HEDI SLIMANE for Celine lights the place with a spring 2019  collection greeted by two drums from the Republican Guard. But this solemn introduction felt more like a counter-artifact to better unveil a spirit of true adolescent adulthood.

This inaugural collection coming out of a giant music box in mirror, on an original sound piece by La Femme, was certainly the most awaited of the week by professionals and fans alike. And SLIMANE—evenly, steadily—did not upset the rule, and offered to Celine its first letters of nobility in couture.

His strength is like that of any master, a capacity to wind up and unfold time at once. His classy wardrobe travels with alluring beauty from the sixties era of swinging London to the disco couture of the eighties. Nothing felt old in this collection—everything is up-to-date. These are the common themes SLIMANE has always cherished, and stated in the early 2000s when he created his famous androgynous silhouette, also known to be extremely skinny.

Men and women here today were equally celebrated in an ode to gender fluidity.

SLIMANE is a true showman who knows how to design clothes in the best classical and formal way, and last night he once again confirmed to the world of fashion his immeasurable talent.

All images © 2018 Hedi Slimane for Celine.

RICK OWENS — SPRING 2019

It’s apparently the last show of Rick Owens to take place at his faithful location of Palais de Tokyo in Paris. It’s also certainly one of his most accomplished in terms of deconstruction and superposition in his work. Nestled in the outdoor courtyard during twenty minutes of “Take My Hand”—a remix by the Russian industrial band Ic3peak—Owen’s wardrobe displays a large spectrum of species like in the myth of the tower of Babel.

The spring 2019 collection started with the figure of insects—dark flies and beetles approaching from afar, wings turned in the wind, antennas out to reach the open sky. This rich and surprising performance ended with a large bonfire, as a call to celebrate all women, from the sacrificed witches to the holy sisters.

There were a lot going on with the clothes, too, with a multitude of layers and proportions. Added on to the scene was an explosion of materials with black rubber burst into parkas, dirty denim, and flags—mixed with pearl, glitter, and shredded lace—transforming the silhouette into dystopian semitransparent goddesses in tunics and gowns.

Rick Owens is himself a precious species, a designer who makes no compromise with his vision and design. He is assertive, strong, and most of all free and independent. Yet with a large crowd of acolytes follow his impressive fashion.

Images © 2018 Rick Owens.

PARIS LA 16 — THE FASHION AND WRITING ISSUE — OUT NOW

The new print issue of PARIS LA—a tenth-anniversary special devoted to fashion and writing—is now available.

PARIS LA 16 includes interviews with Hilton Als, Chris KrausInes Kaag and Desiree Heiss of BlessTisa BryantFlorence MüllerMalik Gaines, Q.M. ZhangCommes des Garçons’ Adrian Joffe, Anelise Chen, and Bice Curiger and Jacqueline Burckhardt of Parkett.

Massimiliano Mocchia di Coggiola contributed an essay with artwork on dandyism, Ramon Hungerbühler and Fabian Marti talk about skate brands, there are pieces on Setsuko Klossowska de Rola, and Pierre Davis and No Sesso, Anne Dressen has written about contemporary jewelry…

… and portfolios and portraits by Cédric Rivrain, Cassi Namoda, David Benjamin Sherry, Wyatt KahnTobias Madison, Item IdemJean-François Lepage, Todd ColeMarie Angeletti, Will Benedict, and Katerina Jebb—who created the Michèle Lamy cover and a poster of Marisa Berenson—grace the issue.

Also: a reprint of Iris Marion Young’s landmark essay “Women Recovering Our Clothes.”

 

PARIS LA 16, published by DoPe Press.

Above: Inside covers, production PDF.

Below: Front and back covers, production PDF.

NO SESSO AND KELSEY LU AT THE GETTY

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“Designing is my art and my therapy. It brings me joy to make stuff… I design based off of emotion and how I feel, and what’s going on in my community around me.” — Pierre Davis, No Sesso*

That community will meet at the Getty Center on Friday night when No Sesso debuts a site-specific presentation in the courtyard, joined by cellist and vocalist Kelsey Lu.

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NO SESSO and KELSEY LU

Friday, August 17.

FRIDAY FLIGHTS, 6 pm to 9 pm.

Getty Center, 1200 Getty Center Drive, Brentwood, Los Angeles.

*”Warm Bodies, No Sesso—The Art of Pierre Davis,” text by Barlo Perry, interview with No Sesso by Dorothée Perret and Todd Cole, PARIS LA 16 (2018): 136–143.

Above: PARIS LA 16 (2018), No Sesso Fall 2017 collection. Photograph by Todd Cole.

Below: PARIS LA 16 (2018), No Sesso 2018-1 campaign. Photograph by Dicko Chan.

 

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LIZ CRAFT’S LIFE IN THE SUNSHINE

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The new artist’s book …MY LIFE IN THE SUNSHINE—LIZ CRAFT 2006–2017 is a stream-of-consciousness visual diary of Craft’s life and practice, featuring family and friends in California, Berlin, Washington State, Oslo, New York and beyond.

The 185 pages of color photographs include contributions by Craft’s partner Pentti Monkkonen, as well as Lena Henke, Paul-Aymar Mourgued’Algue, Dorothée Perret, and Fabian Marti and many others.

 

…MY LIFE IN THE SUNSHINE—LIZ CRAFT 2006–2017 (Los Angeles: DoPe Press, 2017).

dopepress.fr/liz-craft-my-life-in-the-sunshine

See Louisa Elderton on Craft:

docdroid.net/liz-craft-elephant-magazine

Above: Liz Craft, Mermaid (Becky), 2008–2015, Whitney Museum of American Art.

Below: Liz Craft, Mushroom Bubble (Black), 2016. Images courtesy of the artist.

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