While other designers in New York get nostalgic about the 1990s, 70s, or 20s, Piotrek Panszczyk looked back a couple of thousand years, BC, for his latest Area ready-to-wear and couture collection. He’d been “thinking about prehistoric times and how pelts and bones were kind of the first things humans had to build an identity around. It started with this idea of the primal instinct that through the centuries morphed into desire, and then eventually a kind of excess and the life cycle of luxury.” The unsettling ambience of the fashion show, plus the inventive, at points bizarre “bone-y” silhouettes, eventually delivered one of the strongest and intriguing collections coming from the label in the last seasons. The idea was cleverly developed: there were “fur pelt” coats made from fur-printed denim in a variety of colors that delivered runway drama, fur-print, low-slung jeans, and a mini dress with bulbous little godets that spoke to Panszczyk’s commitment to offering real-world alternatives to fantasy. The collection’s highlight: models in big-shouldered jackets or slinky jersey pieces punctuated by beastly rips, the gold-embellished bones of their attackers still elegantly attached to their clothes.







Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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