NEW YORK, United States — Glamor on the one hand, activism on the other:
designers
Tory Burch and Gabriela Hearst showcased two different approaches to
New York Fashion Week on Tuesday.
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‘Richness and
minimalism’
American designer Burch offered New York a vintage-inspired collection
that veered away from her well-known prints and bright colors.
“The collections
have been for me much more personal now that I’m not running the business,” she
told AFP after the show.
Since 2019,
Burch has entrusted her husband, Pierre-Yves Roussel, with managing the
company, while moving into the roles of chief creative officer and executive
chair.
For the
Spring/Summer 2023 edit, Burch said she thought back to when she moved to New
York in the 1990s and wanted to highlight “the concept of richness and
minimalism” at the same time.
With sheer
cotton tops, lace bras, and silver shoes, Burch evoked the sleek sophistication
and eroticism in vogue in the early ‘90s.
“I do think it’s
a bit sexier than what we have done in the past,” she said. “And I think that
women are feeling that right now. I see that that’s how women want to dress,
but I also love a certain elegance to it.”
Guests hold their smartphones to record the Boohoo by Kourtney Kardashian show during New York Fashion Week on September 13, 2022 in New York city.
She said she
also experimented with layering, using a jersey bandeau skirt as a recurring
motif, sometimes worn over pants.
“I wanted to
challenge us to push it a little further and also to have a more focused point
of view,” she explained.
Women’s empowerment
Uruguayan designer
Gabriela Hearst’s show was imbued with ambiance. In
an enormous warehouse with opaque windows, her models paraded down a runway
lined with a gospel choir.
Gold dominated,
shimmering across a cape, on a breastplate, and popping against white and black
accompaniments.
Long yellow and
orange ponchos hand sewn in Uruguay and red pantsuits also brought to mind the
colors of fire.
Some pieces
appeared to have been directly molded onto the models with the collection notes
describing how leather had been soaked in water and then draped over a form to
create unique pieces.
The theme of
women’s empowerment was also woven into the show.
Hearst, who is
also the creative director at Chloe, said her 2023 Ready-to-Wear Collection was
inspired by the ancient Greek poet Sappho and how she had shed light on the
hardships women had to endure.
“This Joy,” a
gospel song written by Grammy winner Shirley Caesar, was performed by the
Resistance Revival Chorus, which was billed as a collective of women and
non-binary singers that addresses how “historically marginalized women have
been in the music industry.”
The catwalk cast
included women’s rights activist Cecile Richards, Mexican Chilean climate
activist Xiye Ba, and anti-toxic shock syndrome campaigner Lauren Wasser.
Hearst also said she had
aimed to offset the climate footprint of her show by working with Swiss company
Climeworks, which uses technology to capture carbon dioxide directly from the
air.
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