Dior and Saint Laurent: an elevated discussion between past and future

Christian Dior delves into luxurious wearable tech, while Saint Laurent reinvents art deco with a contemporary twist.

I’d like to start a conversation between technology and everyday life,” says Maria Grazia Chiuri backstage a few minutes before the start of the Christian Dior Fall-Winter 2022-23 show. Subtle clues on the direction of this collection are floating around her – such as a cover of Donna Haraway’s Chtulucene piece, a driving force in feminism and post-humanism.

“I want to open a feminist outlook on what we envelop our bodies in, and how that has the power to free,” Chiuri says of a collection that she conceived as a discussion between technology, tradition and emancipation, and between past, present and future.

Closeup of gloves from the ready to wear collections, from the Christian Dior Fall-Winter 2022-23 show.
Closeup of gloves from the ready to wear collections, from the Christian Dior Fall-Winter 2022-23 show. Photograph: Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis/Getty Images

This is indeed what is reflected in the decor imagined by the feminist artist Mariella Bettineschi; entitled The Next Era, it consists of a gallery of famed portraits of women from the 16th to the 19th century, almost exclusively painted by men.

The eyes are sliced and stacked, a double set suggesting a “double vision”. “Women, in art or through clothing, have been constricted and I want to change that point of view by modifying their eyes,” the artist says, evoking the mutation between objectification and subjectification of women in her exhibited works.

Chicha Amatayakul, best known for her role as Nanno in Netflix’s series Girl from Nowhere, attends the Saint-Laurent womenswear Fall-Winter 2022-23 show.
Chicha Amatayakul, best known for her role as Nanno in Netflix’s series Girl from Nowhere, attends the Saint-Laurent womenswear Fall-Winter 2022-23 show. Photograph: Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis/Getty Images

Carefully situated between knowhow and renewal, the show begins with a bodysuit complete with organic artery-like seams that sparkle under a black light. The outfit is, like many of the pieces, made in collaboration with the Italian wearable tech startup D-Air Lab, and maintains a constant body temperature thanks to specially developed hi-tech fibres.

Then follows the classic Bar jacket, reinvented and enhanced with a system that regulates body moisture and can provide warming if needed, all in a mesh resembling grisaille and able to take an imprint of the wearer’s body.

Models present creations by designer Maria Grazia Chiuri as part of her Fall-Winter 2022-23 Women’s ready-to-wear collection show for fashion house Dior.
Models present creations by designer Maria Grazia Chiuri as part of her Fall-Winter 2022-23 Women’s ready-to-wear collection show for fashion house Dior. Photograph: Piroschka van de Wouw/Reuters

According to Chiuri, this “everyday solution system that takes [wearable tech] out of the extreme sports disciplines” reinterprets the house’s heritage in a subversive way, and questions the functions traditionally associated with women’s wardrobe essentials.

The utilitarian dimension fuses with classic knowhow, and elevates and diverts the iconic New Look of the house, revisited in an asymmetrical, pleated way, with plenty of detachable and adjustable corsetry and belting.

There, puffer jackets and denim work are given a couture rendering; the leather is laser-cut; the materials range from the most intricate embroidery to waterproof materials, to nylon. Invisible structures and paddings are added as embellishment – yet also conceived to take a shock.

As for the Saint Laurent show, theatrically held in front of a glittering Eiffel Tower – something of a tradition for the house – it is a bridge to another history that this collection is building.

A vision in white from the Saint Laurent show Runway, Autumn Winter 2022, Paris fashion week.
A vision in white from the Saint Laurent show Runway, Autumn Winter 2022, Paris fashion week. Photograph: Rex/Shutterstock

Indeed, creative director Anthony Vaccarello delves into the art deco style and the spirit of that era, more specifically the wardrobe of radical activist publisher Nancy Cunard, known for her masculine-feminine silhouette. This results in an updated version for 2022, opening with flowing gauzy dresses covered in shell-like outerwear, revisiting masculine classics including pea coats, ample leather trench-coats, maximised Perfecto blousons, all elevated by skinny, strappy glittery sandals.

This is followed by sportier lines, such as leggings worn as pants and contrasted with chunky furs; the nightly affair is concluded by tuxedos and slouchy suits, complete with chopped Garçonne haircuts – echoing Yves Saint Laurent’s then shockingly innovative Le Smoking suits.

Somewhere between working woman and party girl, Vaccarello reinvents la Parisienne, all with a subtle whiff of a Gucci-era Tom Ford, and reimagined for the local underworld.

Contributor

Alice Pfeiffer

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Sense and sensuality: Dior embraces female artists while Saint Laurent sparkles
Maria Grazia Chiuri doffs Dior’s beret to ‘revolutionary women’, with feminist essays and a nod to artist Niki de Saint Phalle, and Anthony Vaccarello takes a more sensual tack for his Paris fashion week Saint Laurent show

Hannah Marriott in Paris

26, Sep, 2017 @9:30 PM

Article image
Inside Dior and the rise of mansplaining in style documentaries
The latest film to give us a behind-the-scenes look at the female-dominated fashion industry is just one of many to patronise the people who make this world tick

Hannah Marriott

09, Feb, 2017 @10:00 PM

Article image
Dior designer wins fans by putting feminism above femininity
Maria Grazia Chiuri collects Légion d’honneur hours after her latest haute couture show

Jess Cartner-Morley in Paris

01, Jul, 2019 @5:08 PM

Article image
Major Paris exhibition celebrates 70 years of Dior fashions
Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams also shows off the work of his successors such as Alexander McQueen, John Galliano and Maria Grazia Chiuri

Hannah Marriott Fashion editor

03, Jul, 2017 @6:02 PM

Article image
Maria Grazia Chiuri's Dior debut spells out her feminist message
Chiuri closed the door firmly on her Valentino era with a potent collection that showed Paris fashion week her range

Jess Cartner-Morley

30, Sep, 2016 @6:52 PM

Article image
Dior delivers 1960s feminism to a new generation in Paris
Maria Grazia Chiuri continues theme of female empowerment but with a more tomboyish edge

Jess Cartner-Morley in Paris

27, Feb, 2018 @6:32 PM

Article image
Dior offers pure escapism with fairytale haute couture show
Designer Maria Grazia Chiuri moved from her label debut’s feminist T-shirts into a fantasy world that heralded a bold new attitude

Jess Cartner-Morley

23, Jan, 2017 @6:41 PM

Article image
Miniskirts are back: Dior embraces post-pandemic era with a new look
Short hemlines evoke ‘revolution and the spirit of youth’, says creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri

Jess Cartner-Morley in Paris

29, Sep, 2021 @10:08 AM

Article image
Dior revives the spirit of Josephine Baker as its catwalk guiding light
The performer, civil rights icon and Dior devotee is restored to the fashion pantheon in Maria Grazia Chiuri’s Paris show

Jess Cartner-Morley in Paris

23, Jan, 2023 @5:50 PM

Article image
Dior celebrates haute couture as an antidote to fast fashion
Musée Rodin dressed up to suggest the intimacy of an atelier, revealing the origins of haute couture

Morwenna Ferrier in Paris

02, Jul, 2018 @6:06 PM