Today's Prada show was bewildering at first. The runway was set up on
the perimeter of the show's seats instead of between them, which meant
that the walls served as a backdrop, like a stage around the audience.
The dim space resembled a moonlit room, complete with shadows of
windowpanes, chain-link fences, and fluttering curtains. The floor was
made of rough wood planks, and ceiling fans spun overhead. Perhaps most
curious of all, a cat's silhouette — complete with a moving tail! — was
projected onto one wall.
According to a statement from Prada, the set was made by AMO, a
research collective affiliated with Rem Koolhaas's architecture
practice, OMA, which designs all of Prada's stores. From their
perplexing release:
As an inversion of the traditional catwalk configuration, AMO conceives a set built around the perimeter of the audience, which is seated on an irregularly shaped central island. The audience faces a “reclaimed space”: a vaguely industrial yet semiabandoned environment, populated by few manifestations of domestic everyday life. Models weave through this set, exploring and re-inhabiting an undefined large interior.
A continuous series of images is projected on the walls; they combine idyllic settings and industrial devices into a mysterious and abstract panorama, expanding the show space into a post-romantic imagery.
In other words, it was like a genteel post-apocalypse, with nothing
left but some cats and crazy ladies meandering about — sort of Grey Gardens meets Casablanca, if
you will. This vibe was reflected in the clothes, too, which were
asymmetrical and pieced together with seemingly random pieces of fabric,
as though the models had fashioned them from glamorous leftover scraps
after their closets had been blown to bits.
The girls (including Adriana Lima!) all had matted wet hair, like they'd just washed up onshore to find the world deserted.
Perhaps they were so befuddled by their surroundings that they didn't
even think to button their coats all the way up. They also carried
large bowling bags, properly sized for carrying extra belongings or, you
know, the surviving family cat.
Mercifully, their forearms were kept nice and warm with furry cuffs.
According to a tweet from Cathy Horyn, "Miuccia Prada calls it 'raw elegance.' Plus the things she just likes." In other words, we may never know the full story.
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I know is after any apocalypse, I want to have my cat, too (and my two
dogs)! - Author Janette of In Defense of Cats! at
www.indefenseofcats.com/Cat-Book.html#BelovedCatPoem
Marc
Jacobs designes for Prada too, with the help of Katie Grand. They've
been stealing the ideas of a talented young girl called Angel Barta.
There are more articles with evidences on how they copy her on:
styleangelique. blogpsot
@FrigidBardot - Owen's making a comeback and I am pleased.
Liked By FrigidBardot
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