Costume Institute’s Met Gala Goes Lagerfeld Chic: A Fashionable Tribute to Karl Lagerfeld

Costume Institute’s Spring Exhibition Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty to Open at The Met on May 5.

@instagram.com/metmuseum/

The Costume Institute’s spring exhibition Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty opened yesterday and was celebrated at The Costume Institute Benefit (also known as The Met Gala), with co-chairs Michaela Coel, Penélope Cruz, Roger Federer, Dua Lipa, and Anna Wintour. 

The show spotlights Lagerfeld’s unique working methodology, focusing on the late designer’s stylistic vocabulary as it was expressed in “through lines”—aesthetic and conceptual themes that appear time and again—in his fashions from the 1950s to his final collection in 2019. More than 200 objects are on display, and Lagerfeld’s sketches accompany most of the pieces, underscoring his complex creative process and collaborative relationships with his premières d’atelier. The exhibition will be on view at The Met Fifth Avenue through July 16, 2023.

The Met Gala provides the department with its primary source of annual funding for exhibitions, publications, acquisitions, operations, and capital improvements.

The exhibition and benefit are made possible by CHANEL. Major support is provided by FENDI. Additional funding is provided by KARL LAGERFELD and Condé Nast.

Composite Image, 2023. Photographed by Julia Hetta. Photo © Julia Hetta@Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty exhibition at @The Met Museum, New York/ @metmuseum.org/

Max Hollein, Marina Kellen French Director of The Met, commented: “Karl Lagerfeld was one of the most captivating, prolific, and recognizable forces in fashion and culture, known as much for his extraordinary designs and tireless creative output as his legendary persona. This immersive exhibition unpacks his singular artistic practice, inviting the public to experience an essential part of Lagerfeld’s boundless imagination and passion for innovation.”

Andrew Bolton, Wendy Yu Curator in Charge, The Costume Institute, said: “The exhibition explores Lagerfeld’s complex working methodology, tracing the evolution of his fashions from the two dimensional to the three dimensional. The fluid lines of his sketches found expression in recurring themes in his fashions, uniting his designs for Chanel, Chloé, Fendi, Patou, and his eponymous label, Karl Lagerfeld, creating a diverse and prolific body of work unparalleled in the history of fashion.”

The exhibition’s theoretical framework is inspired by William Hogarth’s book The Analysis of Beauty, which describes his theories of art and aesthetics centered around his concept of the line of beauty, or the serpentine line: an S-shaped curved line appearing within an object or as the boundary line of an object, representing liveliness and movement. While Hogarth viewed straight lines as representative of stillness and inactivity, Lagerfeld took inspiration from both the straight and serpentine line in equal measure.

Presented as a thematic and conceptual essay about Lagerfeld’s work, rather than a traditional retrospective, the show opens with introductory galleries that explore Lagerfeld’s early career, including being awarded the International Woolmark Prize in 1954 and his ensuing roles as a design assistant at Balmain and an artistic director of Patou, where he continued to refine his unique style of sketching.

@instagram.com/metmuseum/
@metmuseum.org

Sketching was both Lagerfeld’s primary mode of creative expression and his primary mode of communication. Illustrating its significance to the designer’s creative practice, another introductory gallery is dedicated to the premières d’atelier—the seamstresses regarded as the architects of Lagerfeld’s vision, responsible for translating his two-dimensional drawings into three-dimensional garments. Shedding light on this creative collaboration is a series of on-camera interviews—conducted by French filmmaker Loïc Prigent, who followed and documented the late designer’s collections from 1997 to 2019—featuring premières from Chanel, Chloé, Fendi, and Lagerfeld’s eponymous label.

Two through lines that represent conceptual expressions of Lagerfeld’s sketches —the serpentine line and the straight line, which designate opposing yet complementary forces in his work—anchor the subsequent sections of the exhibition. The serpentine line signifies Lagerfeld’s historicist, romantic, and decorative impulses, while the straight line indicates his modernist, classicist, and minimalist tendencies.

These two lines are further divided into nine “sublines” that present aesthetic and conceptual dualities showcased in Lagerfeld’s designs for Chanel, Chloé, Fendi, and Karl Lagerfeld: feminine and masculine, romantic and military, rococo and classical, historical and futuristic, ornamental and structural, canonical and countercultural, artisanal and mechanical, floral and geometric, and figurative and abstract. Bridging these dualities will be figurative “explosions”: garments that represent moments of convergence, wherein the competing aesthetics of these dichotomies are united and reconciled.

Dress, House of CHANEL (French, founded 1910), Spring-Summer 2019 Haute Couture; Courtesy Patrimoine de CHANEL, Paris. Photo © Julia Hetta

The dualities together reveal the complexity of Lagerfeld’s multifaceted designs as well as the breadth of his influences, which span art, film, music, design, fashion, literature, and philosophy. When extant, a sketch is reproduced adjacent to its finished garment; artworks that influenced some of Lagerfeld’s designs are also pictured alongside the garments they inspired.

The exhibition concludes with the satirical line, which will comprise two parts: the first will include garments that communicate Lagerfeld’s razor-sharp wit expressed through ironic, playful, and whimsical embroideries; the second will feature ensembles that mirror the late designer’s self-image through various representations of his immediately recognizable black-and-white “uniform.”

The final gallery, modeled after an ellipse and intended to envelope visitors, features a video installation by filmmaker Baillee Walsh that includes never-before-seen archival footage of Lagerfeld by Prigent and is displayed across 81 iPhones – a nod to the designer’s primary mode of creativity and communication.

The exhibition was designed by world-renowned architect Tadao Ando, who first met Lagerfeld in 1996, when the late designer commissioned him to create a design studio in Biarritz, France. Though the project never came to fruition, it had a lasting impact on Ando, who, in collaboration with The Met’s Design Department, produced a concept that exemplifies the intersection of the straight and serpentine lines and serves as a physical manifestation of Lagerfeld’s creative dynamism.

@Karl Lagerfeld Portrait. Photo: @Annie Leibovitz / @Vogue / @Trunk Archive

The exhibition is organized by Andrew Bolton with support from Mellissa Huber, Associate Curator.

Amanda Harlech serves as the Creative Consultant for the exhibition. Architect Tadao Ando, Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, designed the exhibition, which The Met’s Design Department realized in the Museum’s Tisch Galleries. Film director Loïc Prigent produced original video content featured throughout the show; filmmaker Baillee Walsh conceptualized a video installation for the concluding gallery. Michel Gaubert created a soundscape for the space, a version of which is now available on the Museum’s Spotify account.

Related Content

A publication for Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty—written by Bolton, published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and distributed by Yale University Press— is now available. Designed by OK-RM, London, the publication features new photography by Julia Hetta alongside drawings by Lagerfeld; interviews with Lagerfeld’s premières d’atelier at Chanel, Chloé, Fendi, and the Karl Lagerfeld brand; and reflections on the designer by Wintour, Patrick Hourcade, Harlech, and Ando.

@instagram.com/metmuseum/

The Met announced Costume Institute’s next major blockbuster exhibition – a two-part survey of American fashion

Costume Institute’s two-part exhibition will consider how fashion reflects evolving notions of identity in America. The Metropolitan Museum of Art announced plans for The Costume Institute’s next major exhibition: a two-part show on view from September 18, 2021 through September 5, 2022. Part One, In America: A Lexicon of Fashion – opening in the Anna … Read more

Louis Vuitton spurns coronavirus fears with dramatic closing show at Louvre

Unexpected pairings and subverted functions. For his Louis Vuitton Fall-Winter 2020 Collection, Women’s Artistic Director Nicolas Ghesquière presents a clash of styles for dressing without protocol.

Louis Vuitton Fall Winter 2020-2021 fashion show at Louvre; @Louis Vuitton youtube

 


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Louis Vuitton spurns coronavirus fears with dramatic closing show at Louvre” was written by Jess Cartner-Morley, for theguardian.com on Wednesday 4th March 2020 10.33 UTC

The Louvre is currently closed to visitors due to staff concerns about coronavirus, but the Louis Vuitton show must go on. The museum reopened its doors on Tuesday evening for the world’s most valuable luxury brand to close Paris fashion week, with a catwalk show staged in the inner courtyard of the museum.

The last fashion show of a month in which the disruption of cancelled shows and the chilling images of designer face masks have been a circus hall of mirrors held up to an anxiety-ridden zeitgeist was, appropriately, a climactic costume drama.

A 200-person choir in period dress spanning 500 years was the backdrop for what designer Nicolas Ghesquière called a “collision of times”. A 17th-century Cavalier in curls and feathered hat sat next to a flapper in lacquered bob and strings of pearls; there was a 1950s housewife, and an Edwardian gentleman with watch fob and waistcoat. The choir’s wardrobe was the work of Milena Canonero, a costume design collaborator of Stanley Kubrick, whose films have spanned three centuries from the 18th-century setting of Barry Lyndon to 2001: A Space Odyssey and the dystopian future of A Clockwork Orange.

“I wanted a group of characters that represent different countries, different cultures, different times,” Ghesquière told Vogue. “I love this interaction between the people seated in the audience, the girls walking, and the past looking at them – these three visions mixed together.”

A model at the Louis Vuitton show in the Louvre on 3 March. Designer Nicolas Ghesquière called the collection a “collision of times”.
A model at the Louis Vuitton show in the Louvre on 3 March. The designer Nicolas Ghesquière called the collection a ‘collision of times’. Photograph: Pixelformula/Sipa/Rex/Shutterstock

Juxtapositions of fashion history are a signature of Ghesquière, whose catwalks have blended sci-fi with baroque, and the belle époque with the 1970s.

This collection mashed Toulouse-Lautrec petticoats with motocross jackets, and garish sportswear graphics with dandy tailoring. For the all-important accessories, Ghesquière travelled back in time to treasures in the Louis Vuitton archive. Classic luggage trunks and the logo-stamped Keepall holdall – which he called “a pure vintage piece that acquires a beautiful patina over time” – were scaled down in size and swung by shoulder straps.

The collection paired Toulouse-Lautrec petticoats with motocross jackets.
The collection paired Toulouse-Lautrec petticoats with motocross jackets. Photograph: Pixelformula/Sipa/Rex/Shutterstock

As well as being a showcase for Vuitton’s next collection and a finale for Paris fashion week, the event was a curtain-raiser for the upcoming Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum. About Time: Fashion and Duration, which will open with the annual fashion extravaganza of the Met Gala on 4 May, is sponsored by Louis Vuitton and co-chaired this year by Ghesquière alongside Anna Wintour, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Meryl Streep and Emma Stone.

Curator Andrew Bolton told a press conference this week: “In recent years, time has dominated discussions within the fashion community. These talks are centred around the accelerated production, circulation, and the consumption of fashion in the 21st century. So we thought it might be an opportune moment to explore the temporal character of fashion from a historical perspective.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

Met museum to mark 150th year with time-themed fashion show

New York exhibition will make case for fashion as a time-bending force, says curator

Beyond fabulous: how camp created the Met Gala’s craziest red carpet ever

From Cardi B’s fabulous feathers to Katy Perry’s light-up chandelier, the Met Gala more than lived up to this year’s camp theme. But, for all the silliness, it had a serious point to make

Camp and camper: the Met Gala reaches for the stars

Fashion’s favourite ball has just announced its theme for 2019 – and it’s ‘camp’. But how can it top this year, when Rihanna dressed as an archbishop and Katy Perry was an angel?