The "Cruise" Collection - hosted outside the usual fashion week
calendar, but which is an important source of sales - drew stars
including actresses Lupita Nyong'o and Shailene Woodley to
Marrakech for the extravaganza.
As night fell over the city's 16th century El Badi Palace and
its pool and gardens, models - some wearing bandanas - showcased
flowing gowns in maroon or black alongside patterned styles in
fabrics from Ivory Coast, fashioned into the brand's trademark
synched suit jackets.
Unusually for the French label, it commissioned an Abidjan-based
firm to manufacture the cloth, which in its most elaborate form
is printed on two sides, and which featured Toile de Jouy-style
figures and landscapes Dior is known for.
"You're really speaking about the human touch here, like in
couture," Dior's creative chief Maria Grazia Chiuri said in an
interview in Paris ahead of the show. The fabrics, found across
West Africa and showcasing symbols that are sometimes used as a
form of language, had inspired the collection, she added.
Designers Pathé Ouedraogo - or Pathe'O, from Burkina Faso, who
is known for dressing Nelson Mandela - and Grace Wales Bonner, a
British artist, also worked with Dior on pieces for the show,
among other collaborators.
"It helps us to have a different point of view," Chiuri said,
adding that fashion was shifting from a time when it only "spoke
only with a small audience".
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"The way you can speak about the silhouette, the relationship
between the dress and the body, and about how you represent
yourself, if you see this argument only from one point of view, I
don't think it's believable today."
LVMH-owned Dior and other luxury brands are increasingly turning to
elaborate or far-flung catwalk displays to emphasize their Cruise
ranges, which tend to have a longer shelf life in store than other
collections.
With the Marrakech show, Dior also paid homage to the late Yves
Saint Laurent, who took on the brand's creative reigns in the late
1950s and was inspired by North Africa throughout his career.
A museum dedicated to the designer, who went on to found his own
label, opened in Marrakech in 2017.
(Reporting by Abdelhak Balhaki and Youssef Boudlal; Writing and
additional reporting by Sarah White; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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