Fashion Week

The Dior Winter 2022-2023 Men’s Show

“I had been thinking about the relationship between the ballet dancer Margot Fonteyn and Monsieur Dior. The masculine interpretation of this also involved thinking about her most famous dance partner: Rudolf Nureyev. Nureyev is entwined with my personal history because of my uncle, the photographer Colin Jones. Colin had been a ballet dancer, had a friendship with and photographed the star. The collection, or rather collections, are about contrast: the contrasts in the House of Dior in terms of ready-to-wear and haute couture. It’s the difference between onstage and backstage; the life of Nureyev theatrically and in reality. Here it is a meeting of the dancer’s style with that of the Dior archive.” Kim Jones

A coming together both practically and poetically, of utility and lavishness, of the reality of ready-to-wear with the theatricality of haute couture. All comes to a point of amalgamation in the metaphorical life of a dancer, both public and private – that of Rudolf Nureyev.

For the first time this season, Dior Men’s artistic director Kim Jones presents men’s couture. Introduced as a separate entity alongside yet intertwined with ready-to-wear, the collections explore through the figure of Nureyev an idea of two lives lived. Nevertheless, both feature rigour, excellence, ease and discipline at their heart. 

Once more drawing on the Dior archive for inspiration, Saint Laurent’s tailoring is again transmuted into the men’s world, with a particular focus on his volumes, vents, pleats and necklines that run throughout. While Monsieur Dior’s Bar features a new masculine iteration that combines with Jones’ own Oblique – present from his first collection for Dior – with its characteristic extended double-breasted wrap united with a fluid Bar waist curve.

 

A sixties and seventies straightforwardness is utilised in single-breasted simplicity with gently flared trousers in suiting realised in off tones of rich wool melange. Here Nureyev’s style and that of the practising dancer come into play, an attitude also seen in zipped wool jumpsuits and shorts, second-skin ribbed knits and duffle-inflected outerwear together with sumptuous leathers.

In contrast, the world of the couture reflects the extravagance of his stage presence, of Nureyev’s flamboyance, insolence and elegance, while at times mirroring his private passion for collecting antique textiles. This is particularly prevalent in the kimonos that fully utilise ancient and practised hand techniques, realised by master craftsmen in Japan. The silver Uchikake kimono with its prestigious Hikihaku weaving technique is based on one Nureyev owned and wore – it took ten people three months to complete it. It is also in the couture that archive embroideries come into their own, particularly that of the Debussy dress – a spectacular creation dreamed up by Monsieur Dior in 1950 and worn by Margot Fonteyn – reinvented here in a masculine iteration.

Accessories echo at once the simplicity, discipline and extravagance of the two worlds, sometimes at the same time. Echoing a dancing slipper while also drawing on masculine eveningwear traditions, a rigorous San Crispino leather construction is contrasted with a silk-polyester Mary-Jane sneaker for men in the shoes. Softly constructed utilitarian bags that amplify house codes, such as oversized grained macrocannage camera and bum bags. Sumptuous velvet hats, originally designed by Stephen Jones in 1999 for Dior womenswear, now also find a masculine form as a twisted silk jersey dancer’s turban.

The Dior Winter 2024-2025 collection is shown in a presentation directed by Baillie Walsh with music by the composer Max Richter. Here Sergei Prokofiev’s music has been specially ‘revisited’ by Richter for the show. The Dance of the Knights is featured, taken from Prokofiev’s ballet Romeo and Juliet, famously danced by Nureyev and Fonteyn in London in 1965.

 
 

The Poetry of elegance, cuts, materials, and shapes intersect and merge in a striking ballet outlining an original wardrobe, in a subtle tribute to the art of dance. An ode to the House's heritage, Yves Saint Laurent's tailoring, a major inspiration at the heart of the collection, is transposed to men with reinvented volumes, slits, pleats and necklines, while the iconic Bar jacket is shaped by new proportions and united with Kim Jones' Oblique suit. For the first time, the Artistic Director unveils a men's couture collection with singular silhouettes oscillating between discipline and extravagance. Alternately adorned with marvelous embroidery, the creations are luminous expressions of the Ateliers' virtuosity. The kimono, a symbol of excellence and artisanship, at once a garment of intimacy and of the ultimate in pageantry, completes looks of infinite sophistication.

Between purity and extravagance, shoes lend an airy, yet structured grace to the silhouette. Sneakers metamorph into audacious ballerinas, daring by turns the depth of black or the brilliance of iridescent shades, from pastel to fluorescent. Delicate dance pumps are presented in leather or Nylon, topped or not with elastic. High socks are worn with a variety of shorts revealing legs. Leather goods punctuate looks with sleek, flowing curves that combine functionality and modernity, such as belt pouches or camera bags adorned with the architectural lines of macrocannage. A subtle finishing touch, the hats revisit those designed by Stephen Jones in 1999 for the women's wardrobe, and take the form of a sublime turban. An entrancing ballet of color and refinement.

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