Autumn-Winter 2019-2020
Haute Couture Show
1 July 2019 - Paris - 14H30 (GMT+02)
Questioning the form and function of clothing, the architect Bernard Rudofsky’s reflections inspired Maria Grazia Chiuri’s new conceptual vision of Haute Couture as an art destined to dress bodies that are always unique and invested with a singular identity.
Following on from this modern thinker, who grants a central place to the relationship between couture and architecture - two disciplines having to do with the human body and its proportions - Maria Grazia Chiuri presents her Autumn-Winter 2019-2020 Haute Couture collection in Dior’s hôtel particulier. The House’s birthplace - 30, Avenue Montaigne – is where every Dior Artistic Director has worked in strict collaboration with the Ateliers.
Among the inspirations for this collection are the powerful black-and-white works of Penny Slinger – the feminist artist who created the scenography for the show that recounts the potent alchemy of fire, air and water in the heart of a hostile and mysterious nature populated by feminine creatures. They have always shouldered the weight of the world, like a contemporary iteration of caryatids, the sculptures embodying female forms that support the architecture of ancient temples and decorate certain Parisian edifices, draped in tunics with pure lines. Much like the one white dress Maria Grazia Chiuri designed for a collection that explores the pluralistic power of black. “I could write an entire book on black,” Christian Dior declared in his Little Dictionary of Fashion. The “peplos” – the tunic women wore in Ancient Greece – has no defined, constructed cut: it’s the body that gives it its form. In his final collection, Christian Dior returned to this elemental form of draping, dialoguing between notions of couture and of architecture, from flou to tailoring. In echo, an interrogation still resonates today: “Are Clothes Modern?” underscoring Haute Couture’s capacity to question modernity.
Designing a collection almost entirely in black, punctuated by rare colors that reveal its power, implies a return to fundamentals, to the foundations of Haute Couture, and confronting it against contemporary lifestyles. Black demands perfection and here it gives life to transformable capes. Each dress is an edifice that reveals its structure, the bone structure that supports and defines it. “We don’t need a new way of building, we need a new way of life,” Bernard Rudofsky argued. By the same token, this collection etches out an unprecedented landscape, making it possible to question notions about the body, clothing and habitats: Haute Couture becomes a creative laboratory for thinking differently about clothing and its relationship to time and space.
*These caryatids, which the director Agnès Varda filmed poetically in the streets of Paris for her documentary “Les Dites Cariatides” (in English, “The So-Called Caryatids”, 1984), inspired Maria Grazia Chiuri for her Haute Couture creations.
Silhouettes
Set Design
Discover the scenography of the Autumn-Winter 2019-2020 Haute Couture show.
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Backstage
Go behind the scenes of the Autumn-Winter 2019-2020 Haute Couture show.
Photo credit - Inès Manai
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The Front Row
Meet the guests on the Front Row as if you were there!
Photo credit - Pierre Mouton
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Accessories
The key accessories from the Autumn-Winter 2019-2020 collection in pictures.
Photo credit - Morgan O'Donovan
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Streetstyle
Focus on the Dior looks of the guests present at the Dior Autumn-Winter 2019-2020 Haute Couture show.
Photo credit - Asia Typek
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Interview with Maria Grazia Chiuri
Womenswear creative director, Maria Grazia Chiuri, talks to us exclusively about her new collection.
Savoir-Faire
The savoir-faire of Dior expressed through pieces from the Autumn-Winter 2019-2020 collection.
Video credit - JP Ollier
Interview with Penny Slinger
The feminist and Surrealist artist Penny Slinger accepted Maria Grazia Chiuri's invitation to transform the mansion at 30 Avenue Montaigne into a chimerical universe for the Autumn-Winter 2019-2020 Haute Couture show.
Interview with Peter Philips
For the Autumn-Winter 2019-2020 Haute Couture show, Peter Philips, Director of Creation and Image for Dior Makeup, designed a mysterious beauty look.
Make-up
Like perfectly beautiful caryatids, the models who walked in the Dior Haute Couture show had pure, glowing skin. Black powder from the new Dior Tri(o)blique palette underscored the eyes and was applied around the contour from lash line to brow line for a crescendo effect. At once delicate, soft and intense, the look used neither eyeliner nor mascara.
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