2015-06-01

DIOR Cruise 2016 @ A Film by Julien Pujol


Le Palais Bulles: A utopian project that encompasses earth, sky and sea, where the future is built organically from the forms and architecture of the past. In this Collection Croisiére, Raf Simons looks to the landscape and memory of the South of France. Gaining inspiration from the colours, textures and light of the natural world of the Cote d’Azur, together with the style of the people who have inhabited it, the designer draws on tradition and technique to realise clothing for today. In so doing, Le Palais Bulles (Bubble Palace) becomes a metaphor for the approach to the collection overall. "I wanted an idea of freedom, playfulness and individuality to come to the fore in this collection, especially in consideration of the Dior archive,” explains Raf Simons. “It is not a heavy concept; it is light and young and there is a literal lightening of this clothing to make it fresh. Much of the design architecture comes from Mr Dior’s manteaux, his coats. But the heavy fabric is stripped away, the scale is played with and elements of their style are ‘collaged’ into other forms and garments.” Down-to-earth utilitarian garments are contrasted against those of traditional elegance in the collection, where a confluence of styles, patterns, textures and techniques evoke the multi-layered world of the South. The overall and the artist’s smock, the bathing costume and the bias cut evening gown all sit easily side-by-side. A ‘handmade’ sensibility comes into play with the exploration of more ‘homespun’ crafts and traditional techniques, with the atelier’s take on crochet, smocking and patchworking. Land, sky and seascapes find form in collaged Lurex fabrics and furs are knitted to form more tapestry-like structures that further abstract the organic world in scarves and dresses. Situated on the cliffs of Théoule-sur-Mer, the venue for the show - Le Palais Bulles is by the Hungarian ‘habitology’ architect Antti Lovag. Fascinated by Inuit and early human dwellings that were spherical in shape, the architect began this masterwork in 1975, commissioned by Pierre Bernard. Bernard’s house came into being in 1984; by the time of his death in 1992 he requested in his last will that work on the house continue under its new owner. That new owner was and still is Pierre Cardin, the great couturier and former Head of Atelier Tailleur to Mr Christian Dior. With his immense foresight and patronage the house has flourished. “In many ways it is a form of architecture you cannot connect to another,” says Raf Simons of Palais Bulles. “It is more human than rational; individual and playful. It is a place that I have been fascinated by for a number of years and I am so happy to be able to show here.” A special travel journal film was shot by film by Julien Pujol.


No comments:

Post a Comment