Gucci takes a kinky turn; Dolce&Gabbana give a jungle roar

Gucci takes a kinky turn; Dolce&Gabbana give a jungle roar


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MILAN (AP) — Fashion, according to Gucci creative director Alessandro Michele, now is above all "a great platform. It has great power."

Michele has used that platform during his 4½ years at Gucci's helm to give gender fluidity a voice. The fashion house also put sustainability on stage, saying it would spend millions on a program to become carbon neutral.

Fashion is recognized as one of the world's top pollution-producing industries, and luxury producers are taking additional steps to address the environmental impact of making clothes.

The Italian Fashion Chamber, along with Livia Firth's EcoAge consultancy, was presenting its third Green Carpet Awards to recognize notable contributions to reaching that goal.

Milan Mayor Giuseppe Sala said while attending the Dolce & Gabbana show that the fashion industry, given its wide influence, may have a power to lead by example that politicians don't.

Highlights from Sunday's shows on the fifth day of Milan Fashion Week mostly womenswear previews for Spring/Sumer 2020.

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GUCCI UNPLUGGED

Iggy Pop, A$AP Rocky and Jared Leto filled the front row for the show within a show that gave a kinky turn to Gucci's equestrian heritage and railed against uniforms as a liberty-depriving force.

To start: Immobile models were conveyed down a moving runway wearing white canvas straitjackets, a screed by Alessandro Michele against the uniform which he called "a strong sign of oppression" most potently represented by the straitjacket.

Then, the electricity suddenly cut out, and a more conventional - in the Michele-Gucci sense - runway show began in reverse direction. Michele said the sudden power outage and shift in moods were intended to show fashion as a restorer of freedom.

The collection and staging were sparer and less eccentric than his usual fare. Michele, who has completely upended the Gucci design language during his tenure, finally employed the equestrian motifs that are core to Gucci's identity.

But in deliberate fetish turn, he gave a whip "to a girl coming out of a club" and a series of sadomasochistic mistresses.

"I don't feel like I am a servant of the market," Michele said, explaining that wealthy horse owners were an ideal target for a luxury brand.

The mistresses were at times elegant, dressed in plunging gold lame tops with a corresponding deep-V slit in the accompanying leather skirt and at times kinky - puritan collars on a dark robe with sheer sleeves and chain detailing.

At still other times they were overtly erotic, in lace and silk panel slips with red leather gloves and black dominatrix boots. "Orgasmique" was emblazoned on some garments.

Michele also rejected the notion that his expression of gender fluidity in collections "was a new 2.0 discovery. Instead, it is something that exists."

The statement clearly understates the impact Gucci has had in almost five years, disorienting the fashion world. But it also taps into his notion of reaching people who were previously under-represented in luxury fashion.

The collection continues that exploration with men dressed in hot pink ruffled coats and leather jackets with puckered shoulders.

"I don't want to be bored and I don't want to bore people," Michele said. "But mostly, I don't want to be bored myself."

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DOLCE&GABBANA'S JUNGLE ROAR

Designer's Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana set their latest collection in a jungle, a mythic Sicilian jungle, an admittedly tough act after Jennifer Lopez broke the internet this week wearing a sheer, sexy jungle dress on the Milan runway of another fashion house.

With Sofia Vergara, Monica Bellucci and Lady Kitty Spencer among the front-row guests, Dolce&Gabbana tapped into their own sexy DNA with a series of clingy, flattering black dresses that are the brand's calling card.

The black numbers served as palate cleansers between bursts of inspiration around the jungle theme, starting with khaki safari suiting that echoed similar looks on the menswear runway in June.

Animal prints were de rigueur but not overdone. Dresses were done in elegant renderings of zebra, leopard and tiger prints and worn with matching sheer hosiery.

The exotic Laceleaf replaced the fashion house's signature red rose on some prints, and jungle print dresses covered a range of occasions, from summer shopping to seaside attire to evening fun.

Dolce&Gabbana also presented a series of bright beach looks fashioned from colorful scarves and muted day looks that showed off craftsmanship with raffia, lace, macrame, crochet and fringe in tan and ivory tones.

The designers this week opened a newly refurbished boutique for its women's collections on Via Spiga, with 920 square meters (nearly 10,000 square feet) over three floors.

Guests at the opening nibbled on nuts and fresh parmesan cheese while sipping Sicilian wines around a long table filled with fresh flowers and Baroque decorations.

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DROMe RETURNS TO ITS ITALIAN ROOTS

After years of showing in Paris, the Italian brand DROMe -- which has fans in Ariana Grande and Cardi B -- returned to its native Italy to mark its 10th anniversary.

The Florentine brand with a leather heritage by Marianna Rosati featured unexpected twists, around the bodice, in the sleeves and on the waist, creating volume and shape.

Rosati said the collection was about balancing the masculine shapes of the emphasized shoulders and the softer female draping. The designer seeks softness that molds to the body and "creates confidence." Wide trousers are cinched at the waist by draped belts, echoing trailing scarfs in blouses. A button-down shirt sweeps to the side with a twist, leading the eye to a side slit in a leather skirt. A perforated leather tunic is gathered at the side, worn with straight trousers.

The color palette of rust, gold and orange, was inspired by 1970s interior decorating, the designer said.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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