Galliano goes back to the sixties
The British creative director of Christian Dior, John Galliano,
seduced Paris
fashion week on Monday with a show that turned the clock back to the Sixties,
evoking the spirit of Jackie O and rich bored housewives a la Anne Bancroft
in The Graduate. Opening the show with Mrs Robinson, the
title track from the 1967 movie, creative director Galliano sent
bouffant-haired models down the catwalk wearing slimline daysuits in acid
colours of fuchsia, orange and violet. A dazzling set of evening wear included
a giant bright pink puffball, with Galliano's trademark 'rise and fall' hemline
which touched the floor at the back and rose at the front to reveal a
crystal-beaded short skirt.
Galliano said the collection was inspired by a visit to the American Vogue
archives from the Sixties, a time when the legendary Diana Vreeland
was editing the magazine. "I looked into the similar period at Dior when
Yves Saint Laurent and, then, Marc Bohan, were designing for the house, Bailey
and Avedon and Penn were taking great fashion photographs and it was a time of
optimism and bright colours. It seemed to me it is what's needed right
now."
Galliano design for Dior in the catwalk of Paris