Designer Clare Waight Keller unveiled her first menswear collection for storied house Givenchy at Paris menswear week Wednesday as actress Laura Dern caught up with The Associated Press at Valentino’s display that channeled the darkly depths of monochrome.
Dern spoke about how, as a mother of a budding model, she is taking a particular interest in the fashion industry.
Here are some highlights of the fall-winter 2019-20 shows.
GIVENCHY MENSWEAR STANDS ALONE
Keller, the house’s first-ever female designer, reflected her growing confidence in menswear by holding the first standalone men’s show since she ascended to the house’s artistic helm in 2017. It was an old-school presentation that harkened back to the traditions of Parisian couture.
In an unusual touch of class, the designs were explained by the 48-year-old designer as the garments were being showcased by models. The silhouette featured long, and sometimes flared, legs; oversized shapes; rounded shoulders; and flashes of bold color: violet, electric blue and fuchsia.
LAURA DERN IS A PROUD MOTHER
In a pleated red silk Valentino gown, “Blue Velvet” actress Laura Dern looked very much the part on the design house’s front row alongside rapper G. Eazy. As the mother of 17-year-old Ellery Harper — Dern said she was taking an interest in the fashion industry to help her son.
Harper has modeled for Calvin Klein under the watchful eye of designer Raf Simons, and Dern says that Valentino’s designer Pierpaolo Piccioli has also been “generous” in helping his nascent career.
Dern, who came to fame via collaborations with director David Lynch, said she encourages her son to tread carefully in an industry that can be so public, but to relish the opportunities to meet “designers he loves.”
VALENTINO GOES MONOCHROME
Valentino claimed it was bringing street attitude to the atelier. But for fall-winter, Italian designer Pierpaolo Piccioli seemed to have lost some of his creative attitude after a run of superlatively glorious seasons since he took over the sole artistic reins in 2016.
Blocks of monochrome — in gray, camel and black — were a key theme of the collection that was held inside an industrial-looking hall of the Grand Palais. Round sloping shoulders, boxy torsos and baggy pants defined the silhouette. But much of the creative work, such as contrasting textures and layering, were rendered invisible because of the monochrome.
OFF-WHITE, OFF THE BEATEN TRACK
Chaotic scenes abounded in Virgil Abloh’s collection for Off-White that was held in a little-known part of the sprawling underbelly of the Louvre as many guests got lost. The museum structure is, by quite a margin, the world’s biggest.
Some fashion insiders even ended up following unsuspecting tourists in the wrong direction, confusing them as part of the fashion press. Others were led up and down stairs, and above and below ground several times, before finding the proper entrance. Inside the venue, there was little respite for the lucky guests who did eventually get in as they sweated in sweltering high temperatures in the jungle-like show decor.
VIRGIL ABLOH’S URBAN EXCESS
Big silhouettes, bold color and urban styles were behind Virgil Abloh’s visually arresting fall-winter collection. Concrete slabs were laid among overgrown creepers, grass and ferns as the show decor to evoke a sense of inner-city decay.
This was the first clue to understanding the American it-designer’s urban vibe that played on excesses in color and overgrown proportion. It’s little wonder that the house has, in the recent past, attracted the likes of Jay-Z, Drake and Kanye West. Billowing denim jeans with hanging toggles began an oversize theme, alongside a huge suit jacket and a gargantuan fanny-pack slung across the torso.
Unfortunately, these made up the most subtle part of the display.