Men’s – The Beauty of Resistance. Rick Owens AW24

When Rick Owens speaks, you better listen. The designer’s autumn-winter 2024 fashion show, entitled “Porterville“, wasn’t only a visually mind-blowing experience and wholesome food for thought, but an act of resistance.

The starting point of this brilliant collection was the tedious circumstance of transiting through airport retail. “We are herded through that gauntlet of a very specific beauty and aspiration: of a certain kind of sexuality, a certain kind of face shape, a certain kind of body shape – and it’s unattainable.” For Owens, this experience sums up contemporary mass luxury and what he observes as an intolerance of difference that is the result of its function to sell a dream of sameness – a homogenized standard. “I call that standard ‘airport beauty.’ And I oppose it. And when I wear my platform boots as I go through the airport it is to oppose airport beauty. This is my resistance.” Subverting enforced conformity – that’s actual beauty.

For this very personal show, Owens opened his house in Paris, instead presenting the collection at the Palais De Tokyo courtyard. “That standard is dishonest… but this is a fully resolved Rick Owens experience. It can’t get any more honest or authentic than this. And that was my basic urge this season: to be sincere.” He added: “I’m trying to participate in and contribute to all alternative beauties: to bombastic beauty, sometimes, but also kind and soft beauty.” And what is “Porterville” about? The show’s name is after the California town in which Owens was raised. “Bleak,” is how he describes it. “I remember it for its intolerance – although the intolerance I experienced was mild, obviously, compared to any intolerance that we’re seeing today.” By contrast this house – which Michele Lamy secured when she and Owens moved to Paris just over two decades ago – is a sanctuary. “I want to be a haven. A force of anti-intolerance.” The clothes reflected all that. The designer honored creative collectivism by inviting multiple collaborators to share his platform. The fantastically insectoid inflatable rubber boots that puckered and popped as the models walked in them were by London based designer Straytukay. Owens said he saw another Londoner, Leo Prothman, posting his take on Rick’s signature Kiss boots and asked him to add them to today’s collection. Challenging to manufacture but fantastic to watch were the jackets and pants made by rubber couturier Matisse Di Maggio. The family of Owens models were this time joined by the Russian trans artist (and exile) Gena Marvin.

The collection was also a retrospective look at some of Owens’ all-time classics, now magnified, even more elongated and subverted. The almost ecclesiastically spiked shoulders of his duvet jackets, the airbag embrace of his balled body wrappings, and the beastly toughness of his fluffed jumpsuits and capes both projected and protected character. The leather perfecto, in hands of Rick, is an entire cathedral architecture.

This is a fashion moment that reminds you, during the endless fashion month cycle, that it’s all worth it.

Collage by Edward Kanarecki.
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