logo
Glenn Martens makes his debut for Maison Margiela

Glenn Martens makes his debut for Maison Margiela

Vogue Singapore10-07-2025
Whatever it was that we witnessed at the Glenn Martens Margiela debut, it was wrapped up in an an apparition of fearsome beauty. In basement chambers lined with layers of peeling paper, a collection of elababorately masked people evoked Gothic sculpture and strange, antiqued and patch-worked surfaces, sometimes almost as if they'd sprung from the walls themselves.
It takes some guts for a designer to follow both John Galliano and Martin Margiela, especially straight into presenting the Artisanal collection—the equivalent of haute couture at this house. It needed someone bold and fearless enough to seize that challenge, yet smart and skilled enough not to stumble obliviously over a storied past that many in fashion hold sacred. Martens proved himself to be that person: a designer who brings his own peculiarly Belgian sensibility to a label founded by a Belgian.
If we've been craving a frisson from fashion, now here it was, arriving in a strange, characterful form, a vision fraught with poetic imagery rising from dark corners of mediaeval history to give a new, cracked gloss to the upcycling and repurposing foundations of the house.
'I'm from Bruges, which has this whole gloomy, Gothic kind of gloominess,' Martens said in a preview. 'Bruges has this austere vibe of Flanders, which, of course, very much connects with Martin. I'm different from that generation, but I think a lot of designers are—Martin changed the way we look at clothes. So it's a massive honour and very humbling experience to be part of the house, and of course coming after John Galliano, the biggest couturier in history, is even more humbling.'
In a symbolic way, Martens made it about a house, starting from the richly decayed texture of 17th century Flemish embossed leather wallpaper, antique drapes, and the Dutch flower and 'nature morte' still lives of game that might have hung in homes of that time. 'I am not a minimalist,' he laughed. In his mind, the decaying surfaces of the precious wallpaper made a connection with the painted and patch-worked techniques Margiela used in his first collection.
And then Martens was off, fashioning a collection that was one-third upcycled, making use of paper, photocopying, hand-painting, junk jewellery, and tin plates beaten into some of the masks. He began with clear plastic looks which referred, he said, to blown glass. Maybe also to Margiela's dry-cleaning collection?
After, he took it in a wholly Martens way: two spectral figures conjured from Gothic church statuary, a disturbing confrontation, surely, with the deathly portents stalking our times. Then, the luminescent wonder of the figures swathed and swagged about in Martens's metallised velvet drapes. There were recycled biker jackets—a Margiela staple—but covered over with paper patchworks of wallpaper print.
'Chapters' (as Martens called them) of more delicate things followed: tulle feathers, wings, or flowers blooming from the surfaces of prints, fluttering cut-outs of lace peeling from sheer dresses. But the total-chill moment came when his three draped jersey dresses, ghostly, caped, and body-veiling walked amongst us. Underneath these miraculously constructed sepulchral shrouds were corsets of a strange construction, jutting the hips and rising in a busk in the front. In that, it could be read that Martens made his acknowledgement to Galliano.
As a first outing, it was stupendous. Though it should not be forgotten that Martens has hardly sprung from nowhere. At 42, he's in that bracket of designers who have had long experience from an early age (in his case, his own brand, Y/Project, Diesel, and a Gaultier couture season). These are the ones who have risen to the top at this moment to face off against each other for the fashion supremacy challenge of 2025. In Glenn Martens, Maison Margiela has surely found its ideal defender. Courtesy of Maison Margiela
1 / 12 Look 1 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
2 / 12 Look 4 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
3 / 12 Look 9 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
4 / 12 Look 10 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
5 / 12 Look 13 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
6 / 12 Look 23 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
7 / 12 Look 28 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
8 / 12 Look 34 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
9 / 12 Look 38 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
10 / 12 Look 47 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
11 / 12 Look 48 Courtesy of Maison Margiela
12 / 12 Look 49
This article was originally published by Vogue.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

De Bruyne embracing fresh start at Napoli after Man City departure
De Bruyne embracing fresh start at Napoli after Man City departure

Straits Times

timea day ago

  • Straits Times

De Bruyne embracing fresh start at Napoli after Man City departure

Belgian midfielder Kevin De Bruyne is raring to go at Serie A champions Napoli after not being offered a contract extension by Manchester City, and said linking up with compatriot Romelu Lukaku was part of the appeal. Regarded as one of the greatest midfielders in Premier League history, De Bruyne ended a glittering decade-long spell at City at the end of last season and joined Napoli on a free transfer last month. "I have been in the Premier League for so long and in the end I made the decision to go out of England," De Bruyne told reporters on Saturday. "I have done what I have done and in the end I am a Man City player for life. It was also with the way that it ended for me, I thought, it is time to find a new challenge. "When I had the whole project in front of me and then the fact that I could play in Italy and still play at a high level was exciting for me." De Bruyne, who turned 34 last month, said he had much to learn in Italy, but with Belgium teammate and polyglot Romelu Lukaku by his side, the learning curve looks far less steep as he adjusts to Antonio Conte's side. "Napoli already are champions but they are still improving their squad... I am hoping that I can help the team grow and I will also learn from them, a new way of playing, a new competition," De Bruyne said. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Mindef, SAF units among those dealing with attack on S'pore's critical information infrastructure Asia How China's growing cyber-hacking capabilities have raised alarm around the world Asia At least 34 killed as tourist boat capsizes in Vietnam's Halong Bay Singapore 1 dead, 1 injured after dispute between neighbours at Yishun HDB block Singapore Vessels from Navy, SCDF and MPA to debut at Marina Bay in NDP maritime display Asia Autogate glitch at Malaysia's major checkpoints causes chaos for S'porean and foreign travellers Asia SIA, Scoot, Cathay Pacific cancel flights as typhoon nears Hong Kong Singapore A deadly cocktail: Easy access, lax attitudes driving Kpod scourge in S'pore "Romelu was happy (about the move), I spoke with him in the national team (camp), he wanted me to join. I know Romelu since we were 13-years-old, so we are really tight together. When we played in Chelsea we lived together for two or three months. "It makes it a little bit easier that I know him because he is somebody who can translate for me and it helps because he knows the coach, he knows the team." Napoli begin their 2025–26 Serie A campaign on August 13 with a trip to Sassuolo. REUTERS

Belgium probes death of Canadian festival-goer at Tomorrowland
Belgium probes death of Canadian festival-goer at Tomorrowland

Straits Times

timea day ago

  • Straits Times

Belgium probes death of Canadian festival-goer at Tomorrowland

Find out what's new on ST website and app. Around 400,000 people are expected to attend Tomorrowland being held near Antwerp over two weekends. BRUSSELS – Belgian authorities said on July 19 they have opened an investigation into the death of a Canadian woman who fell ill at Tomorrowland, one of the world's largest electronic music festivals. Prosecutors in Antwerp said they were looking to establish what caused the death of the 35-year-old, one of tens of thousands of festival-goers who attended the event's opening night on July 18. The woman became unwell at the festival held in Boom, near Antwerp, and was transported to a hospital, where she was later pronounced dead, a spokeswoman for the Antwerp prosecutor's office said. Featuring scores of DJs, including David Guetta, Lost Frequencies and Charlotte de Witte, Tomorrowland draws electronic music enthusiasts from all over the world. Around 400,000 people are expected to attend over two weekends. The event was thrown into doubt this week after a fire destroyed its main stage. But organisers speedily put in place an 'alternative setup', and the festival went ahead as planned. AFP

The curious animals of Amsterdam's Art Zoo
The curious animals of Amsterdam's Art Zoo

Straits Times

timea day ago

  • Straits Times

The curious animals of Amsterdam's Art Zoo

Jaap Sinke, one of the artists of Darwin, Sinke & van Tongeren, with a replica of a Tyrannosaurus rex fossil at the Art Zoo in Amsterdam in June. AMSTERDAM – Ms Eva Krook stood inside a canal mansion in Amsterdam in 2024, nervously awaiting news about a lost Tyrannosaurus rex. She had received a phone call from Italy informing her that there had been a mix-up with four crates, in which the giant fossil replica had been packed for shipping to her new museum. The massive tail, rib cage, pelvic bone and limbs had all arrived. But when she opened up the fourth crate, it was empty, save for a few scattered wood shavings. The T. rex's skull was missing. This was one of the hiccups in setting up the Art Zoo, an ambitious new museum that opened to the public in the centre of Amsterdam in June . Situated in a 17th-century mansion in the city's canal district, the museum brings together natural history and contemporary taxidermy created by two Dutch artists who call themselves Darwin, Sinke & van Tongeren. Ms Krook, the museum's director, said the T. rex was not her only logistical problem. She also had to figure out how to get a giant gorilla, made of more than 70m of denim, through the building's long and narrow front doors. 'This is a landmark building, so it's not like we can just break a door to fit it in,' she said. 'I joked that I felt like I was visiting the gynaecologist because we're always trying to figure out how to get the baby out – or in this case, in.' The T. rex and denim gorilla are just two of more than 200 extraordinary objects now on show at the Art Zoo. The museum was created by Ferry van Tongeren and Jaap Sinke, a Haarlem, Netherlands-based artistic duo behind Darwin, Sinke & van Tongeren. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore No train service across entire Bukit Panjang LRT line due to power fault Asia Autogate glitch causes chaos at KLIA and Johor checkpoints, foreign passport holders affected Singapore S'pore sees no baby boom in Year of the Dragon despite slight rise in births in 2024 Singapore A deadly cocktail: Easy access, lax attitudes driving Kpod scourge in S'pore Singapore 'I thought it was an April Fool's joke': Teen addicted to Kpods on news that friend died Singapore New auto pet wash service in Buona Vista draws flak, but firm stands by its safety Life Don't call me a motivational speaker: Why Adam Khoo has moved on to options trading Sport Lionesses forward Danelle Tan ready for new challenge in Japan Van Tongeren and Sinke trained as artists, but went into advertising after graduation. In 2005 Van Tongeren sold his agency, planning to retire, but instead teamed up with Sinke to follow a dream. The two became what they call 'fine taxidermy' artists and set up a company that they named after themselves, as well as evolutionary English theorist Charles Darwin, a major source of inspiration. A 4.8m crocodile hangs from the ceiling in the entry hall of the Art Zoo in Amsterdam. PHOTO: ILVY NJIOKIKTJIEN/NYTIMES For the Art Zoo, they brought together some of their existing taxidermy works, along with hundreds of new ones they made especially for the museum. They also collected fossils, shells, cages and display cases, and assembled other curious objects to complement the animals. In the entry hall, a 4.8m crocodile hangs from the ceiling, bound in red ropes. In the foyer, tropical birds with bright blue and green wings cling to dozens of antique birdcages. On one wall of the living room hangs a wreath made of entangled lethal snakes: cobras, pythons and a black mamba. A leopard crouches in an antique furnace, and spotted ostrich chicks make a nest in a conch shell. The leg of a mammoth stands like a pillar nearby. Tropical birds clinging to dozens of antique birdcages in the foyer of the Art Zoo. PHOTO: ILVY NJIOKIKTJIEN/NYTIMES This eclectic museum came together over about two years. Mr Peter van Duinen, director of the Vrije Academie, an educational institution that leases the building, had used two floors for temporary art exhibitions, but he wanted something more permanent. He worked with Ms Krook, his wife, to find the right people for the job. The mansion is known as the Cromhouthuizen, after its original owner, Jacob Cromhout, a merchant and regent, or member of the city's governing class. It has been preserved for centuries in near-perfect condition, with its original marble floors and Baroque ceiling frescos, and was previously home to the Bible Museum. Sinke and van Tongeren take inspiration for their taxidermy work from 17th-century Dutch and Flemish still-life paintings, which often included exotic animals depicted in dramatic postures. 'It's all about poses,' van Tongeren said in an interview, adding that he likes to reference early anatomical drawings by artists such as Andreas Vesalius and Leonardo da Vinci that presented their flayed subjects as if they were alive, moving and sometimes even dancing. He and Sinke also borrowed from the concept of the cabinet of curiosities: artful collections of exotic objects, fossils, shells and dead animals that were popular among artists and scientists of Enlightenment-era Europe and were the predecessors of modern museums. Animals crawling out of bottles in a former kitchen at the Art Zoo. It took about two years for the museum to come together. PHOTO: ILVY NJIOKIKTJIEN/NYTIMES In a former kitchen downstairs, van Tongeren and Sinke have transformed the room into a place called 'Darwin's Workshop'. Surrounding a 19th-century papier-mache reproduction of a gorilla's muscles are various objects such as giant crabs, speckled shells and lizards emerging from glass beakers. It appears to be a scientific laboratory, filled with anatomical drawings and plaster busts of Darwin's head. 'They focus on the idea of the 'Gesamtkunstwerk',' a concept in which everything in the space, including the furniture and the artworks, 'adds up to one tableau vivant', said Ms Krook said. 'Each room has a dialogue between the architecture and the art, so that the whole is greater than its parts.' Flowers on display. PHOTO: ILVY NJIOKIKTJIEN/NYTIMES Sinke said that none of the animals in the Art Zoo were killed for the purposes of taxidermy. As a sign in the entryway explains: 'All died of natural causes, under the care of zoos and breeders.' Even the extremely rare species on show – a giant anteater, a Brazilian pygmy owl and a Persian leopard – were all acquired as road kill or corpses, Sinke added. The giraffe skeleton in the atrium is real, as is the mammoth leg in the living room, Mr van Duinen said, but the T. rex replica was made from an original 66-million-year-old fossil found in the Black Hills of South Dakota and that was exhibited for some time in the Naturalis Biodiversity Center in Leiden, the Netherlands, where it was named Stan. Ms Eva Krook, the director of the Art Zoo, with a cheetah at the museum. PHOTO: ILVY NJIOKIKTJIEN/NYTIMES It took Ms Krook three months to locate the missing replica of Stan's skull last winter, but after several phone calls, she located it in a storage facility in the south of Holland. Van Tongeren drove down to retrieve it, and brought the remaining piece of the T. rex to Amsterdam in his van. NYTIMES

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store