205
Fashion Jobs
NAME IT
Buying Responsible, Outerwear
Permanent · BRANDE
L'OREAL GROUP
Salon Business Partner - Professional Products Division - Sjælland/København
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
BEST SELLER
Tech Lead - Whs Analytics
Permanent · AARHUS
SAMSOE
Business Controller (Sql And Data Analytics Specialist)
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Estée Lauder Companies is Looking For an Execution Planner to be Part of Our Nordic Supply Chain Team
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
BESTSELLER
Sales Manager
Permanent · BRANDE
L'OREAL GROUP
Supply Chain Graduate - l’Oréal Luxe Product Division - Copenhagen
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
KERING EYEWEAR
Kering Eyewear - Lindberg Junior Trade Marketing Manager
Permanent · AARHUS
PROCTER&GAMBLE
Key Account Manager
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
PROCTER&GAMBLE
Key Account Manager
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
VILA
Art Director, Graphic Team
Permanent · SKANDERBORG
ONLY
Retail Planner
Permanent · BRANDE
ESTÉE LAUDER
Earned/Owned Media Senior Manager to Lead a Team of Eight People in Our Nordic Affiliate
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
ZIZZI
Financial Controller
Permanent · BILLUND
SMASHBOX
The Estée Lauder Companies is Looking For a Nordic Product Manager (Maternity Cover)
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
JACK & JONES
Junior Planner
Permanent · BRANDE
JDY
Key Account Manager
Permanent · BRANDE
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Key Account Manager - Premium Beauty Products
Permanent · COPENHAGEN
BEST SELLER
Site Reliability Engineer Tech Lead For Hybrid Computing Platform
Permanent · BRANDE
NOISY MAY
Sales & Product Manager
Permanent · AARHUS
VERO MODA
Retail Director
Permanent · AARHUS
ZIZZI
Online Buyer Til Fashion
Permanent · BILLUND
Published
Mar 4, 2018
Reading time
3 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Givenchy’s brutalist, bold and Berlin vision

Published
Mar 4, 2018

Brutalist, bold, often beautiful, occasionally pretty sleazy and often chicly modern is how one could describe both Berlin, and the latest Givenchy collection, which was inspired by the German capital.
 

Givenchy - Fall-Winter2018 - Womenswear - Paris - © PixelFormula


Staged impeccably inside the giant hall of the Palais de Justice, cut into curved sections and separated by 10-meter high velvet curtain walls, the cast marching briskly, just like Berliners always seem to do.
 
Givenchy’s designer Clare Waight Keller has clearly done her research in daytime, and after-hours, Berlin, whose citizens love a certain somber magnificence. Just like this show, packed full of noble furs – full-length Siberian wolf coats; beaver pea coats; snazzy billionaire’s wives lynx looks. Except every single one of them was fake. Hard to remember such convincing fake fur, quite frankly.

Where the furs were grand, the leathers were funky, finished to look oily, faintly disreputable and much cooler for that. Whether the medieval-shouldered dusters, or the square tunics or uber wide sleeved coatdresses – often with police zippers to add grittiness.
 
For more intimate moments a wonderful lace negligée dress in aubergine, and a rather divine combination of mannish waistcoat, mega bow and shards of white silk. Fringes everywhere, recalling how young women really dressed up for club culture. The collection was entitled Night Noir.
 
“We started with the whole culture clash, the bourgeois versus the counter culture; from WW2 to the fall of the Wall, and that resonated in the oily sleazy leathers. There is a real sense of brutalism I really love about Berlin, and the sense of a journey there, and of taking the elevated train to go clubbing. That still resonates,” explained the smiling British designer, whose soundtrack mingled in U-Bahn train sounds.
 
A co-ed show where the guys were proper Berlin dudes, from the artist fêting his latest opening in an impeccably cut jet black suit worn under a marvelous oversized white down coat, to the techno DJ in the 80s flared pants and super-hero zip boots; to the excellent off-duty pilot blousons. Practical yet cool, clothes a guy could wear to Berlin’s chicest eatery Borchardt and the city’s legendary all-night club, Berghain.
 
When one includes a smart new tote, brutally named Jaws, “as it fills up with everything,” a book-shaped A4-size clutch called the Gem; along with a beguiling new police boot with a diagonal zip, and the show also boasted plenty off likely commercial winners.
 
Clearly, Waight Keller’s debut season working in Givenchy’s couture laboratory has helped find her focus at the house, after a tricky opening ready-to-wear collection in September. Her ability to combine a very sharp in silhouette with frou and lace and ladylike frocks showed a designer finding her range with growing assurance.
 
Though there are few more international industries than fashion, let’s remember this was a British designer staging a homage to a German city in the capital of France; chauvinism always lurks beneath the surface. So, the British critics packed into the backstage, covering Waight Keller in a halo of praise; while the Italians, tight-lipped slipped out quietly, having still not fully digested the departure of their countryman Riccardo Tisci from the house.
 
Which was a pity, because this was very much a win for Waight Keller. Inside France’s largest courthouse, the fashion scales of justice just declared her a winner.

Copyright © 2024 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.