Tags: EU | Paris Fashion Week | Watch

Fergie Applauds Jean Paul Gaultier's Couture Homage to '80s

Wednesday, 27 January 2016 01:48 PM EST

PARIS (AP) — It was probably before the time of his front row stars singers Fergie and Beth Ditto — but they laughed and applauded nonetheless at Jean Paul Gaultier's fashion homage to the Palace club, France's answer to New York's once-famous Studio 54.

Here are the highlights of Wednesday's spring-summer 2016 couture collections in Paris.

THE PALACE PARTY

The glamorous, underground theater was the hippest place in Paris from its inauguration in 1978 by Grace Jones, who famously serenaded guests with her version of "La Vie en Rose" all the way to its end in 1983.

The converted theater represented a golden age in French disco culture and saw Mick Jagger, Jerry Hall and Andy Warhol rub shoulders with designers such as Yves Saint Laurent, Karl Lagerfeld, and, yes, Gaultier himself. It was immortalized in a song by disco-queen — and Salvador Dali muse — Amanda Lear, who sat at the Gaultier show as her music boomed in the soundtrack.

Model Farida Khelfa, also a famed Palace regular, laughed and clapped from the front row.

GAULTIER'S '80s THEATRE

At Wednesday's show by Gaultier, the fashion dial was first turned to the beginning of '80s.

Sequined pill box hats, strong shouldered tuxedos, jumpsuits, silken pajama suits, and big, big hair dazed guests at the high-energy show delivered with a funky 1980s soundtrack. The litany of stars that graced the famed Palace venue were the inspirations for the designer's myriad 69 looks.

Grace Jones was reimagined in a dull shimmering black-and-brown sequined jumpsuit and brown lace robe. Khelfa was spotted on the catwalk in a black perfecto jacket with blood-red nails, lips and shirt.

And one look, big blond hair against a black crepe bustier dress with fuchsia satin, must surely have been the glamorous Hall.

GALLIANO'S COLLAGE COUTURE

John Galliano demonstrates a seemingly effortless flair in anything he does.

For Maison Margiela's spring show, the former Dior man explored the process of couture through the construct of collage and spontaneous fusion. It made for the wackiest styles seen this season — but possibly also the most artful.

Twenty-five creations played on billowing volumes, contrasting fabric and styles, and pieces of clothing stitched together in unexpected places. If this sounds like a recipe for a fashion mess, in the hands of Galliano it blossomed.

An off-white trench coat in triple georgette and baggy black riding boots meshed with a layered, pleated skirt, cutting a beautiful feminine silhouette.

A silk dress with Chantilly lace was covered at the front with an enveloping layer of sheer black silk that wrapped the entire look — as if blown on the model accidently by the wind. It billowed gracefully backwards as the model walked forward — proving true method in the madness.

ELIE SAAB'S EMBELLISHED PASTELS

Wednesday's show was one of his most embellished couture displays to date for the popular Lebanese designer Elie Saab, who explored looks that channeled pastel foliage-clad princesses against a verdant tropical forest.

With tiaras and diamond jewelry, the 50 pastel looks in blue, lavender, pink, white and flashes of cobalt blue, riffed of the sheen and sparkle of glimmering leaves. As ever, cinched-waist floor-length gowns were the go-to silhouette. But fine embroideries of silk, sequins and beads made this an atypical, poetic collection.

A lavender jacket and an A-line gown sported delicate embroideries that glistened like morning dew on a spider web. Some bolder printed multicolor silk dresses, meanwhile, had a great hazy look, as if washed by water.

VIKTOR & ROLF'S SURREAL COUTURE

They say couture is the "ideas factory" for the fashion industry.

No one tries to demonstrate this more than Dutch design duo Viktor Horsting and Rolf Snoeren — who in Wednesday's installment conjured up a bizarre series of huge, white fabric figurative face sculptures.

The show started with a wearable buttoned white mini-dress — of which the vertical buttoned down part morphed into a large human nose in profile. As the collection progressed — things took a turn for the surreal, at times evoking Pablo Picasso's one-line drawings on the 1950s.

Blown-up segments, which resembled pieces of paper cut into shapes, adorned the looks.

They started small — like a face across the bust — but grew in size and complexity until the models' faces were completely obscured by the weird paper-like sculptures. Some fashionistas were worried that one model, with a huge fan covering her face, might crash into the front row.

She didn't.

Thomas Adamson can be followed at Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP

© Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Europe
It was probably before the time of his front row stars singers Fergie and Beth Ditto - but they laughed and applauded nonetheless at Jean Paul Gaultier's fashion homage to the Palace club, France's answer to New York's once-famous Studio 54.Here are the highlights of...
EU,Paris Fashion Week,Watch
735
2016-48-27
Wednesday, 27 January 2016 01:48 PM
Newsmax Media, Inc.

Sign up for Newsmax’s Daily Newsletter

Receive breaking news and original analysis - sent right to your inbox.

(Optional for Local News)
Privacy: We never share your email address.
Join the Newsmax Community
Read and Post Comments
Please review Community Guidelines before posting a comment.
 
 
TOP

Newsmax, Moneynews, Newsmax Health, and Independent. American. are registered trademarks of Newsmax Media, Inc. Newsmax TV, and Newsmax World are trademarks of Newsmax Media, Inc.

NEWSMAX.COM
© Newsmax Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
NEWSMAX.COM
© Newsmax Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved