BY ANTHONY VACCARELLO
SAINT LAURENT PRODUCTS REPRESENT THE CONFLUENCE OF CRAFTSMANSHIP ― SUSTAINABILITY. THE HOUSE APPROACHES DESIGN, DEVELOPMENT, AND MANUFACTURING HOLISTICALLY, SELECTING MATERIALS ― SUPPLIERS RESPONSIBLY, ENSURING FAIR WORKING CONDITIONS FOR ARTISANS, ― WORKING TO MINIMIZE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS AT EVERY STEP OF THE WAY.
The first signs as to where Anthony Vaccarello was going with his Saint Laurent men’s show in Berlin — a miracle of impressive tailoring broad in the shoulders and attenuated in the legs, interspersed with yet more shoulders, nakedly fragile this time, framed by gossamer silk or chiffon sleeveless shirting—was to be found on Instagram. That’s the thing with these destination shows: You tend to start sleuthing about what’s going to be on the runway before the plane has touched down on the tarmac. In the case of Saint Laurent, Vaccarello posted days before his show a brief clip of the 1950 French short film, Un Chant d’Amour, a grainy black and white ode to sensuality as much to criminality, and directed by the writer Jean Genet. Vaccarello also mentioned the name of the collection: Each Man Kills the Things He Loves.
For Genet-philes (up goes my hand here) the title was, by way of Oscar Wilde, the song sung by Jeanne Moreau in a movie adaptation of one of the French writer’s great novels, Querelle de Brest. It was later filmed in 1982 by Rainer Werner Fassbinder simply as Querelle. Et voila, there you have it: Moreau, an icon of the French nouvelle vague, as Parisian as, well, Yves Saint Laurent, and Fassbinder, one of Berlin’s most legendary directors, a man who knew a thing or two about dissonant sexuality and the power between men and women as much as, well, again, Saint Laurent.
“ When you leave the show, I want you to have ( the silhouette ) clearly in your head, ”
MEN SS
SAINT LAURENT
2024
what could bE mORE ( YSL ) than this? — the exquisite tension between tailleur, aka suiting, and flou, all that light-as-air, fluid, sensual soft dressing, of which there was plenty in this men’s show.
“ I started to build the collection around the shape of the
women’s now being worn by men, ” Vaccarello said.
“ To start somewhere very ( classic ), and then
play with the codes of ( masculinity ). ”