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ready-to-wear A/W 2013/

Raf Simons, "The geek who conquered the fashion world", according to The Observer, showcased his second ready-to-wear collection for Christian Dior in March 2013.

details/
 

Christian Dior's Autumn-Winter 2013 collection was presented at the imaginary sky of Place Vauban, Paris. Enchanting, yet, clean and simple the show was like a modern fairytale. The models walked between giant mirrored spheres which created unreal clouds onto the catwalk. There were classic Dior silhouettes and new shapes in tweed, leather, denim, cashmere, flannel, wool and silk. Simons used a monochromatic palette with flashes of pale yellow, pale pink, cobalt and -a faboulus- bright red. The make up was natural with rose lips and the hair was dressed in elegant buns.
 

More details about the garments:

mid-high length dresses with nipped waists
bustier dresses, tops and bodices
denim "Bar" suits
full skirts
elegant capes
classic pants
structured coats
silk bodices

Dior's houndstooth
some knits, embroidery and crochet
sculptured pointy shoes

 

The collaboration with The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts gave a final touch of creativity, in a combination of luxury fashion and pop art.

inspiration/


The persistence of memory: the thoughts, feelings and experiences that flow and inspire the creative process over the passage of time. For Autumn-Winter Raf Simons focuses on this notion of memory and how it shapes the nature of design at the house; how this works for himself and how it once worked for Christian Dior. “This collection is more connected to passions we share,” says Raf Simons.
“Like a real interest in art – Christian Dior started his career as a gallerist and represented both Dali and Giacometti early on. The connection to certain periods of time is also signifi cant, his obsession with the Belle Époque in his case, the Mid-Century modern in mine. Here the connections made are important, the very idea of them rather than what they are made to; the attraction and obsession is the signifi cant part.”
The collection functions in the form of a visual scrapbook, a collage of clothing containing signifi cant moments in time both for Raf Simons and the house of Christian Dior. A Dior coat can function easily alongside a further exploration of the Bar jacket in wool denim, itself teamed with a new take on Oxford bags. Dior’s iconic houndstooth motif is explored and transposed, emerging frequently as a wool bustier. A notion of asymmetry, begun in the haute couture collection, can be seen throughout, resulting in a abundance of permutations in the silhouettes that can go from short to long in one look. The collection is full of unexpected juxtapositions and visual non sequitur; a free association, like a personal scrapbook, both playful and profound, it embraces idiosyncrasy, culminating in what Simons refers to as “memory dresses.”
Here, a typical twenties shift shape is embroidered and appliqued with motifs that point to parts of the personal history of Dior; a Surrealist style free association culminates in these clothes and is up for open interpretation. They also display the new graphic sensibility that is introduced in this collection and permeates throughout. This is most significantly displayed in the unique collaboration with The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts in the collection. The early hand drawn work from the 1950s of the artist Andy Warhol is found as a recurring motif of the mid-century style printed or embroidered on the clothing and accessories.
“For me Warhol made so much sense,” says Simons of this collaboration. “I was interested in the delicacy and sensitivity in the early work he did, I was drawn to that graphic style naturally in this collection. It was that notion of hand work and personal signature that fi tted throughout.” These notions of Surrealism and Pop are brought together in the dreamscape of the show set. As a Magritte-style cloud path meanders around the gigantic mirrored spheres of the space, the mix of memory and desire in the collection is brought to dream-like culmination.

 

source/ dior.com

"My aim is a very modern Dior, but at the end of the day, I also look back. [...] I find that period between 1947 and 1957 extremely attractive, and there was a lot of modernity. There was the romantic appeal looking back to his mother and the belle époque, but there was also a constant evolution in shape, changing proportions and the ideas connected to the World War were revolutionary."

Raf Simons/

Raf Simons, as the new artistic director, brought back to the house of Dior the sophisticated glamour of the fifties, set up perfectly to date. His designs for the Autumn-Winter 2013 collection were modern, clean and effortless. Classic yet unexpected, Raf Simons is, clearly, not a typical fashion designer.

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all photos/ Alessandro Gerofalo, indigitalteam.com

video/ getting ready for Christian Dior ready-to-wear A/W 2013 show

video/ Christian Dior ready-to-wear A/W 2013 show

video/ backstage of Christian Dior ready-to-wear A/W 2013 show

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