
Jonathan Anderson played with history for his first show at Dior
'For me, style is how you put things together. Over the next period, that's what I want to work on,' said Jonathan Anderson. For all the enormity of his taking of the reins at the house of Christian Dior—and despite his blizzard of wildly talked-about teasers and the pre-crush of Rihanna and A$AP Rocky, Sabrina Carpenter and all his celebrity and designer friends—the most convincing thing about his debut show was just how close-up and tangible he made it feel in reality.
Anderson's plan was to get in with a visceral idea of what to wear with what, be it a Bar jacket with conceptual chino shorts, socks and 'school summer sandals,' a softly washed-out gray velvet morning jacket with a tonally similar pair of faded blue jeans or a full-on amazingly elaborate pre-revolutionary court or Louis 16th frock coat worn with ordinary black cotton trousers and brown suede high-top hiking boots. Wear this, should you fancy, with a high stock collar as an accessory, which Anderson got from looking at sketches by Romaine Brooks, a painter who documented lesbian life in the 1920s.
This is the kind of high-low magic that Anderson transferred from his own brand to Loewe, and then used to revolutionise that LVMH label into a financially and critically successful phenomenon over a decade. Loewe didn't really have codes, though, so Anderson could start with a clean slate. With Dior it's very different; there's a long history to play on. 'The great thing about Dior is it being able to reinvent with each designer,' he said. 'I embrace that. Like Maria Grazia Chiuri's book bag. That is not my bag, but I can do something else with it.'
Anderson's own agenda for Dior was emblematically set out in his use of Andy Warhol's photographs of the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat and the socialite Lee Radziwill, Jackie Kennedy's sister. Two immensely stylish Americans 'from two different sides of the spectrum—who might've been at the same party,' as Anderson put it. Dior, he admitted, in a preview is 'ginormous,' a house which 'has to mean something to everyone.' In his first outing, he showed his adeptness at focussing on both detail and enormity at the same time.
Outside, there was a stretched photograph of Christian Dior's original 1950s salon at the Avenue Montaigne covering the giant venue at the Invalides. Inside, the models walked up and down, close to the audience, so there could be no mistaking the quality or the detail of the clothes. 'This is how people saw couture in the original Dior salon, really close up,' said Anderson in a preview. 'I want people to be able to see the fabric and the make, whether it's the wash of a chino or the moire silk on a waistcoat.' On the dove-gray walls hung two small, priceless still-lifes by Chardin, the French past-master of the close contemplation of small things—a vase of flowers and a bowl of wild strawberries—painted sometime in the 1750s or 60s.
Bringing important art into proximity with fashion people could be said to be one of Anderson's formulae. These borrowings, quieting as they are in content, were naturally also a power statement for LVMH, whose resources and influence can overcome the difficulty of borrowing from the Louvre (the strawberries) and the National Museum of Scotland (the flowers) for an hour's fashion show. In the collection, the direct parallels were Anderson's appropriations of 18th- and 19th- century French menswear. 'They are incredibly rare, but we found a collection of original waistcoats,' he explained. 'For me, and for all my generation, Margiela was God. So I thought: 'let's make them replicas.'' It was his route into showing the elevated patrimony of Dior's haute couture ateliers—the flower embroidery, the latticed gold buttons, the exact color of a mauve moire silk waistcoat. The closeness of the presentation meant one could gasp at the exquisite French quality of a pink faille waistcoat and practically sense the refinement of a silk evening scarf as it swished by.
But Anderson wants to land all of that in reality, too: he'd thought about the idea of boys discovering those pieces 'in a trunk, and just pulling them on.' That worked, paced out as the show was with a long inventory of French-preppy items including colorful cable knit sweaters, normal summery jeans.
Where was Jean-Michel Basquiat in this? Anderson had taken care to consult with Karen Binns, the late artist's close friend who was commissioned by Dior to curate a podcast on the 1980s in New York, featuring Hilton Als and the artist Toxic. Perhaps his innate knack of knotting a rep tie over a denim chambray shirt was present in the multiple tie segues? Ties on shirts are young fashion now. It worked: something multiple generations of Dior shoppers can safely agree on.
And of course, Monsieur Dior himself had to be dealt with. Anderson took him head on in his first look. The Bar jacket was made from an Irish Donegal tweed—a matter of national pride for Anderson—which featured here and there throughout the collection. As for the side-looped flanges on the cargo shorts in that same look? Well, those came from Anderson's study of the stiff architecture of a Dior winter 1948 couture dress named Delft. 'It's old. It had flopped. That inspired me,' he said with a laugh, adding, 'I think it's a good bridge between history, commerce, history, style—and make.'
Anderson is a very big gun now in the coming face-off between the three newly-placed 40-year-old creative directors who head the biggest labels. Matthieu Blazy at Chanel and Demna at Kering's Gucci we'll be seeing in September, when Anderson will also be showing his first womenswear for Dior. These are times when the stakes are high and the luxury market is more under fire than it has been for decades. Anderson isn't fazed. There was a gleam in his eye when he said, 'I think it's good the market is difficult, because it means it's ready to change. And I always work best under pressure.' Courtesy of Dior
1 / 20 Look 1 Courtesy of Dior
2 / 20 Look 2 Courtesy of Dior
3 / 20 Look 3 Courtesy of Dior
4 / 20 Look 6 Courtesy of Dior
5 / 20 Look 8 Courtesy of Dior
6 / 20 Look 10 Courtesy of Dior
7 / 20 Look 11 Courtesy of Dior
8 / 20 Look 18 Courtesy of Dior
9 / 20 Look 20 Courtesy of Dior
10 / 20 Look 30 Courtesy of Dior
11 / 20 Look 35 Courtesy of Dior
12 / 20 Look 41 Courtesy of Dior
13 / 20 Look 42 Courtesy of Dior
14 / 20 Look 44 Courtesy of Dior
15 / 20 Look 46 Courtesy of Dior
16 / 20 Look 48 Courtesy of Dior
17 / 20 Look 50 Courtesy of Dior
18 / 20 Look 57 Courtesy of Dior
19 / 20 Look 59 Courtesy of Dior
20 / 20 Look 67
This article was first published on Vogue.com.

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Nylon
4 hours ago
- Nylon
Hermès unveils second chapter of women's ready-to-wear fall-winter 2025 collection
Put together by Nadège Vanhée, the Artistic director of Women's Ready-to-Wear for Hermès, the second chapter of the Fall-Winter 2025 collection evokes a protagonist of understated strength, effortless allure and subtle complexity, rooted in urban life but drawn to the natural world. Image courtesy of Hermès. At the heart of the collection is the braid, which is an enduring house signature and a timeless symbol of connection and continuity across cultures. Taking inspiration from equestrian plaits and drawn from the asymmetrical graphics of the Dressage Tressage silk carré by Virgine Jamin, this motif returns with a renewed spirit and modernist expression that weaves a joyful tale shaped by craftsmanship, imagination, and inventive engineering. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. You'll also find classical codes that have been transformed through kaleidoscopic arrangements of function, shape, colour and print with modular configurations for clothes to adapt to the movement of everyday life with a fold, turn, and zip. Building on the house's elemental equestrian blanket, poncho sweaters and enveloping coats have been reimagined in double-faced cashmere, lined with Dressage Tressage panels that can be removed depending on the occasion or climate. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Image courtesy of Hermès. Archetypes are invigorated with high craft and a sporty, outdoorsy look with its technical features enhanced by textural elements like cord embellishments on the collars, quilted leathers, contrast braiding on knits, and weaves that are reminiscent of French bistro chairs. In addition to this, a palette evoking the natural landscape balances the collection's rich, earthy tones that were inspired by the equestrian universe with its warm reds and fiery oranges tempered by soft lilac, clay white and inky blue. Availability of the Hermès Fall-Winter Collection — second chapter has yet to be announced. For more information on the collection, visit


Vogue Singapore
7 hours ago
- Vogue Singapore
Jonathan Anderson played with history for his first show at Dior
'For me, style is how you put things together. Over the next period, that's what I want to work on,' said Jonathan Anderson. For all the enormity of his taking of the reins at the house of Christian Dior—and despite his blizzard of wildly talked-about teasers and the pre-crush of Rihanna and A$AP Rocky, Sabrina Carpenter and all his celebrity and designer friends—the most convincing thing about his debut show was just how close-up and tangible he made it feel in reality. Anderson's plan was to get in with a visceral idea of what to wear with what, be it a Bar jacket with conceptual chino shorts, socks and 'school summer sandals,' a softly washed-out gray velvet morning jacket with a tonally similar pair of faded blue jeans or a full-on amazingly elaborate pre-revolutionary court or Louis 16th frock coat worn with ordinary black cotton trousers and brown suede high-top hiking boots. Wear this, should you fancy, with a high stock collar as an accessory, which Anderson got from looking at sketches by Romaine Brooks, a painter who documented lesbian life in the 1920s. This is the kind of high-low magic that Anderson transferred from his own brand to Loewe, and then used to revolutionise that LVMH label into a financially and critically successful phenomenon over a decade. Loewe didn't really have codes, though, so Anderson could start with a clean slate. With Dior it's very different; there's a long history to play on. 'The great thing about Dior is it being able to reinvent with each designer,' he said. 'I embrace that. Like Maria Grazia Chiuri's book bag. That is not my bag, but I can do something else with it.' Anderson's own agenda for Dior was emblematically set out in his use of Andy Warhol's photographs of the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat and the socialite Lee Radziwill, Jackie Kennedy's sister. Two immensely stylish Americans 'from two different sides of the spectrum—who might've been at the same party,' as Anderson put it. Dior, he admitted, in a preview is 'ginormous,' a house which 'has to mean something to everyone.' In his first outing, he showed his adeptness at focussing on both detail and enormity at the same time. Outside, there was a stretched photograph of Christian Dior's original 1950s salon at the Avenue Montaigne covering the giant venue at the Invalides. Inside, the models walked up and down, close to the audience, so there could be no mistaking the quality or the detail of the clothes. 'This is how people saw couture in the original Dior salon, really close up,' said Anderson in a preview. 'I want people to be able to see the fabric and the make, whether it's the wash of a chino or the moire silk on a waistcoat.' On the dove-gray walls hung two small, priceless still-lifes by Chardin, the French past-master of the close contemplation of small things—a vase of flowers and a bowl of wild strawberries—painted sometime in the 1750s or 60s. Bringing important art into proximity with fashion people could be said to be one of Anderson's formulae. These borrowings, quieting as they are in content, were naturally also a power statement for LVMH, whose resources and influence can overcome the difficulty of borrowing from the Louvre (the strawberries) and the National Museum of Scotland (the flowers) for an hour's fashion show. In the collection, the direct parallels were Anderson's appropriations of 18th- and 19th- century French menswear. 'They are incredibly rare, but we found a collection of original waistcoats,' he explained. 'For me, and for all my generation, Margiela was God. So I thought: 'let's make them replicas.'' It was his route into showing the elevated patrimony of Dior's haute couture ateliers—the flower embroidery, the latticed gold buttons, the exact color of a mauve moire silk waistcoat. The closeness of the presentation meant one could gasp at the exquisite French quality of a pink faille waistcoat and practically sense the refinement of a silk evening scarf as it swished by. But Anderson wants to land all of that in reality, too: he'd thought about the idea of boys discovering those pieces 'in a trunk, and just pulling them on.' That worked, paced out as the show was with a long inventory of French-preppy items including colorful cable knit sweaters, normal summery jeans. Where was Jean-Michel Basquiat in this? Anderson had taken care to consult with Karen Binns, the late artist's close friend who was commissioned by Dior to curate a podcast on the 1980s in New York, featuring Hilton Als and the artist Toxic. Perhaps his innate knack of knotting a rep tie over a denim chambray shirt was present in the multiple tie segues? Ties on shirts are young fashion now. It worked: something multiple generations of Dior shoppers can safely agree on. And of course, Monsieur Dior himself had to be dealt with. Anderson took him head on in his first look. The Bar jacket was made from an Irish Donegal tweed—a matter of national pride for Anderson—which featured here and there throughout the collection. As for the side-looped flanges on the cargo shorts in that same look? Well, those came from Anderson's study of the stiff architecture of a Dior winter 1948 couture dress named Delft. 'It's old. It had flopped. That inspired me,' he said with a laugh, adding, 'I think it's a good bridge between history, commerce, history, style—and make.' Anderson is a very big gun now in the coming face-off between the three newly-placed 40-year-old creative directors who head the biggest labels. Matthieu Blazy at Chanel and Demna at Kering's Gucci we'll be seeing in September, when Anderson will also be showing his first womenswear for Dior. These are times when the stakes are high and the luxury market is more under fire than it has been for decades. Anderson isn't fazed. There was a gleam in his eye when he said, 'I think it's good the market is difficult, because it means it's ready to change. And I always work best under pressure.' Courtesy of Dior 1 / 20 Look 1 Courtesy of Dior 2 / 20 Look 2 Courtesy of Dior 3 / 20 Look 3 Courtesy of Dior 4 / 20 Look 6 Courtesy of Dior 5 / 20 Look 8 Courtesy of Dior 6 / 20 Look 10 Courtesy of Dior 7 / 20 Look 11 Courtesy of Dior 8 / 20 Look 18 Courtesy of Dior 9 / 20 Look 20 Courtesy of Dior 10 / 20 Look 30 Courtesy of Dior 11 / 20 Look 35 Courtesy of Dior 12 / 20 Look 41 Courtesy of Dior 13 / 20 Look 42 Courtesy of Dior 14 / 20 Look 44 Courtesy of Dior 15 / 20 Look 46 Courtesy of Dior 16 / 20 Look 48 Courtesy of Dior 17 / 20 Look 50 Courtesy of Dior 18 / 20 Look 57 Courtesy of Dior 19 / 20 Look 59 Courtesy of Dior 20 / 20 Look 67 This article was first published on

Straits Times
14 hours ago
- Straits Times
Concert review: Kyoko Hashimoto's recital a masterclass in sound, colour and nuance
Pianist Kyoko Hashimoto played at the Victoria Concert Hall on June 27 as part of the Singapore International Piano Festival. PHOTO: CLIVE CHOO 31st Singapore International Piano Festival: Kyoko Hashimoto In Recital Victoria Concert Hall June 27, 7.30pm Japanese pianist Kyoko Hashimoto, originally listed to perform at the Singapore International Piano Festival in 2022 but had to cancel because of Covid-19, finally made her belated debut here. Her recital, comprising mostly short 20th-century works and reminiscent of Frenchman Pierre-Laurent Aimard's recital in 2023, was a revelation. The first half was wholly devoted to preludes by French composers, beginning with three of Gabriel Faure's Nine Preludes (Op. 103) dating from 1909 to 1910 . The rarity of these miniatures was matched by the masterclass of sound, colour and nuance provided by Hashimoto. Late Faure is elusive because of chromaticisms and paucity of outright melody, but she made one listen with intent. Following these, three of Olivier Messiaen's Eight Preludes ( 1928 to 1929 ), each carrying descriptive French titles, became far less forbidding. These were essentially extrapolations of Claude Debussy's sonic palette into the future, and with the imagination piqued, Instants Defunts (Departed Moments) simply evoked sorrow and regret. Bell-like registers and frequently altering rhythms in Les Sons Impalpables Du Reve (Impalpable Sounds Of A Dream) were made to sound catchy and inviting, while Cloches D'Angoisses Et Larmes D'Adieu (Bells Of Anguish And Tears Of Farewell) took hurt feelings and frazzled emotions to another level. The selections from Debussy's First Book Of Preludes (1909 to 1910 ) were the evening's most familiar music. Most impressionist and atmospheric was Sounds And Scents Mingle In The Evening Air, its feel of mysticism contrasted with the infectious tarantella rhythm of The Hills Of Anacapri. The build-up for The Engulfed Cathedral was epic in Hashimoto's hands, while The Dance Of Puck provided moments of comedy which considerably lightened the proceedings. The recital's second half opened with Japanese composer Toru Takemitsu's most famous piano work, Rain Tree Sketch II (1992), composed in memory of Messiaen. Hashimoto's very deliberate approach to this tribute strongly aligned with the earlier idioms encountered. Coming as a jolt to the system was iconoclastic French modernist Pierre Boulez's 12 Notations (1945), atonal aphorisms 12 bars long and each lasting less than a minute. Extremes of dynamics were exploited, including fists slamming clusters on the keyboard, all guaranteed to shock but not long enough to cause lasting offence. All this made Polish composer Karol Szymanowski's early Etude In B Flat Minor (Op.4 No.3) sound old-fashioned which, like Sergei Rachmaninov's Prelude In C Sharp Minor (Op.3 No.2), chagrined the composer with its over-popularity. The recital's only extended and earliest work was Russian Alexander Scriabin's First Sonata In F Minor (Op. 6) from 1892 . Hashimoto was the ever-resourceful guide through its four movements, which headed inexorably to ultimate tragedy, with a plodding a funeral march as its conclusion. The pleasing symmetry forged with American pianist Kate Liu's performance of Frederic Chopin's Funeral March Sonata the previous evening was purely coincidental. Hashimoto's two encores provided pure respite: the lyricism of Scriabin's Prelude In C Sharp Minor (Op.11 No. 9) and melancholic lilt of Chopin's Mazurka In A Minor (Op. 17 No. 4). Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.