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Ralph Lauren, 1982

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  Ralph Lauren’s Fall 1982 Campaign photographed by Bruce Weber

Ralph Lauren’s steadfast historicism rivals the likes of Karl Lagerfeld and John Galliano, it’s all been a part of his rendition of the American Dream: recasting the country’s modest heritage as the ultimate luxury, fueled by a stoic nostalgia. A reference to colonial America, with quilted patchwork and scenic motifs on sweaters, bleeds a high kitsch factor bordering on comedy. In anyone else’s hands you could be distracted by the hilarity of it all. But for Ralph Lauren, of course with photography by Bruce Weber, there’s a touching sincerity that really makes you want to believe. A humble decorative richness, a sense of humor, and a nostalgic nod to a triumphant past are all very potent ideas, then and now.

 



Ralph Lauren, 1983

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From Ralph Lauren’s Spring 1983 campaign photographed by Bruce Weber

“Another worthwhile collection this week was Ralph Lauren’s. Smaller in scope than the Beene clothes, it made a definite statement with considerable style. ‘I felt this was the time to do simple, pure clothes,” Mr. Lauren said. ”Simplicity and elegance are to me the same thing.”

Except for a few pastels, he worked in black or white linen, did not add an extraneous detail and concentrated on minimal shapes, among them a shift dress, a pants suit, a button-front or wrapped dress. Everything was simple and pristine.”

- From “Beene Combines Ease and Luxury” by Bernadine Morris for the NYT, October 30, 1982


Ralph Lauren, 1991

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A life of leisure for the genteel gentry. A haughty nonchalance. Ralph Lauren’s exploration of the era’s pared down but not yet minimalist ease offered a suitable haven for those who disdained an encroaching cultural vulgarity. The monochromatic palette, the soft sensual lines, and a nod to 1930’s leisure wear, albeit slightly inauthentic coming from the Great Gatsby himself, is all class.


Ralph Lauren, 1985

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Yasmine Le Bon for Ralph Lauren Fall/Winter 1985

A nostalgic charm pervaded Ralph Lauren’s fall showing. Bits of old lace wrapped around the throat and extending over the wrists, derby hats, pearl chokers, walking sticks and high laced shoes were some of the details that contributed to the Edwardian feeling. The best pieces included tapestry jackets, gray flannel trousers with both cuffs and stirrups and a variety of short, cabled sweaters.

- By BERNADINE MORRIS in FALL SPORTSWEAR: A WIDE RANGE OF THEMES for the NYT, May 3, 1985

 


Ralph Lauren, 1984

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Josie Borain for Ralph Lauren Fall/Winter 1984

Not since the days of Courr eges and the miniskirt has an idea taken such a firm hold on the fashion world. The idea – for fall and winter – is men’s clothes for women, and it looks like one whose time has come. It emerged full blown in the collection of Calvin Klein early in the week, and subsequent showings have proved how suitable it is for sportswear today.

The only problem is that perhaps there should be more than one concept going. Nothing has yet appeared that is nearly as forceful. Designers have adapted the men’s concept in different ways, with varying success. But it is quite clear that the essential fashion for the cool-weather months is a big coat with broad shoulders, one that resembles a man’s overcoat.

Ralph Lauren has his share of these coats, some of them more slender and graceful than most of the genre. There is a gentle quality to Mr. Lauren’s styles, signaled by the antique diamante pins and the lace edges on the sweaters, another ubiquitous contemporary fashion. Still, his jackets are oversize, his trousers cuffed, like anyone else’s.

- By BERNADINE MORRIS in THE MANNISH LOOK TAKES OVER for the NYT, May 4, 1984


Ralph Lauren, 1983

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Kristin Clotilde Holby for Ralph Lauren Fall/Winter 1983.

Ralph Lauren apparently thought he was opening up new vistas when he chose the Seventh Regiment Armory as the site of his fall fashion show, and certainly its vast space could accommodate the crowds. But you couldn’t reach out and touch the clothes or even tell for sure what they were made of. It wasn’t a cozy atmosphere and probably neither Christian Dior’s New Look collection nor Yves Saint Laurent’s rich peasant clothes could have survived this arena.

But Mr. Lauren certainly tried. He sent out on the runway what some spectators felt were three different collections, not counting the men’s clothes, which were interspersed with the women’s fashions.

The first scene was a family affair and the liveliest. It consisted of ski clothes for a family in which everybody goes to the slopes. The most interesting designs were the hand-knit sweaters with colorful cartoons of skiers decorating the fronts.

After that initial exuberance, the mannequins affected a slouchy, casual stance well suited to the understated clothes that seemed directed at the horsy set. Except for a few long pleated skirts that looked attractive with navy Shaker-knit pullovers and tweed jackets, pants were worn with everything, including good-looking casual double-breasted coats.

The tailored coat-dresses that Mr. Lauren pioneered are back in single-and double-breasted versions in gray flannel and brown tweed. The tailored clothes were followed by playful brightly colored ponchos over hooded tops and jersey pants and by equally bright suede tunics. Then came the evening clothes.

from FALL FASHION: SERIOUS ABOUT SPORTSWEAR by BERNADINE MORRIS for NYT April 27, 1983


Jamaica, 1978

Ralph Lauren, 1982


Ralph Lauren, 1988

Saint Laurent’s Old Time Rock and Roll

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You’ve got Jim Morrison, Bob Dylan, Keith Richards (always), even Jimi Hendrix, all dripping in the sueded spirit of Clint Eastwood Spaghetti Westerns, marching down the runway at Saint Laurent. And so Hedi Slimane’s categorical survey of rock and roll iconography and symbolism presses into the late 1960s; an era of rugged romance, drug-induced dandyism, and the rock star as shaman. The veracity of Slimane’s historicist stagings is challenged only by Ralph Lauren whose own attention to detail and ability to realize such romantic fantasies, beyond even the limits of camp, are unparalleled. There is no information left out as Slimane lavishes over his rock god lust. Nothing is left to the imagination. With the extraordinary set design, outrageously specific casting and the harrowing music you can only be in awe of Slimane’s commitment and talent when it comes to telling a story through clothes.

Slimane and Lauren share more in common than one might think. Both are designers who formalized their deepest aspirations and installed them into a brand that could translate it into an arsenal of luxury merchandise. Just as Lauren co-opted the American dream and claimed it for himself Slimane has ensnared rock and roll, weaving its mythology into Saint Laurent’s, extracting its codes and selling them as the classics they have become. This indulgence of rock and roll and the play off its ubiquity is not without precedent. It’s a world John Varvatos has mined and at one point inelegantly bought when he installed a retail location at the former site of CBGB (one wonders if Saint Laurent would have known better). It’s also very much the world of Anna Sui who is perhaps the godmother to Slimane’s rock redux, her signatures were unmistakable in the women’s looks Slimane showed alongside the men’s. Rock and roll is not the most original point of departure but for a brand like Saint Laurent  it does make an interesting focus.

Yves Saint Laurent was a great provocateur of the bourgeoisie, an interest nurtured by a love for Schiaparelli. He stayed one step ahead of the status quo, pushing their limits of taste and respectability. At Dior he shocked his employers by designing around beatniks. In 1971 he caused a scandal for glamorizing 1940s prostitutes. He challenged comfort zones just enough to provoke and inspire and move things along. That Slimane has conquered rock and roll under the banner of the esteemed French house is notable. Rock and roll stands for subversion of mainstream Western patriarchal culture, born from the expressions of African Americans treated as second class citizens, as “others,” it has since expanded into countless genres each offering their own contrary view to the conventions of established society. It’s the natural go-to for instant cool. But with this new Saint Laurent collection, and perhaps a few others in the past, a problematic paradox has emerged. As Slimane assimilates rock’s mythology into Saint Laurent’s he has turned it into that very thing which rock chic stood in opposition against: the uniform of the haute bourgeoisie. It is the very thing which wealthy consumers, still invested in conventions of appropriateness, adopt to play the role of rebel without having to actually be one. The rock looks Slimane exploits are no more rebellious than a banker-striped suit or an embroidered polo.

What is the significance of rock and roll in fashion today? Do the youth who Slimane seems to worship with intense devotion still care about it or has it become yet another used-up cliche? Most young kids these days are listening to rap and hip hop. From Shayne Oliver to Riccardo Tisci to Rick Owens, rap and hip hop have become the leading catalyst for subversion in contemporary men’s fashion. Not unlike rock and roll, it was born from the black experience and the hardship of being dejected by society. It implies a sense of strength and resilience and as its own ecology changes (becoming significantly less homophobic and perhaps less misogynistic) it has come to represent a progressive attitude as well. Turned in on itself, subverted in the manner that Shayne Oliver and Rick Owens have carefully mastered, it goes where rock and roll cannot; tackling race, gender and class in a way that speaks to the issues of today. One wonders if Kanye West had it right when he so brashly proclaimed in a tirade against Slimane that “we culture. Rap is the new rock and roll. We the rock stars.” Perhaps rock and roll is still relevant, a number of established and promising contemporary musicians would certainly argue that it is. But if Slimane is to ever make a compelling go of it he’ll have to let go of his historicist antics and theatrical costumes and give it a more vital context. Rock is diverse and there surely are other iterations that might have a bit more urgency. It would behoove Slimane to explore them.

 


Ralph Lauren, 1991

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RL91a

RL91b

“For me, luxury is a sensibility, an approach to life. It’s not about the season’s newest anything. It’s about personal style and creating an environment of comfort and ease.”

-RALPH LAUREN


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