It was young people who raised the
curtains on Sarah Burton’s fall show for Alexander McQueen. In an almost ceremonial
moment, perhaps not quite registered by the crowd, she asked the black-clad
junior members of her teams, and students from local schools in Paris, to hoist
the woven hangings alongside the runway. Their taking part, however unnoticed,
had a resonance which ran through a powerfully evocative show;..
her first which
brought a down-to-earth sense of young womanhood to the magic of McQueen.
This season, she took her team to
Cornwall, the southernmost county of the United Kingdom. It’s a landscape which
inspired the sculptor Barbara Hepworth, and has ancient stone circles, medieval
churches and—if you look hard enough—a surviving subculture of paganism and
healing witchcraft.
Discovering a Cloutie tree, on which
people tie rags and ribbons as wishes and mementoes, triggered the beginning of
the collection. Back in London, where Burton works in seclusion with the
couture-level team which made Kate Middleton’s wedding dress, imagination took
flight. Evolving ideas with the incredible hand-embroidery and textiles teams,
they wove ideas from the memento ribbons into tweeds, and thought about
self-determining women, women who sewed messages into sampler’s centuries ago.
The result was a show which
staggered the audience with its dense imagery—dresses beaded with silvery
trees; white lace figured with kissing doves, medieval tapestries of flora and
fauna, trailing threads, witchy symbols of stars and suns traced in jet. Still,
the thing which really made it was the believable youthfulness: long, tendrilly
“undone” hair by Guido Palau, and flat studded bootees or McQueen trainers.
Sarah Burton was wearing a pair when
she ran out to give her bow, a pincushion still tied to her wrist. She is a
hands-on worker. For the first time, she had fully articulated her own vision,
whilst fully honoring
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