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Late Franco Moschino became one of the best known iconoclasts
of our time by making fun of fashion victims. His creations decorated
with tongue-n-cheek logos (“Stop the Fashion System”) and
visual gags (plastic croissants, bottle caps and safety pins) evoked
philosophical ideals geared towards challenging the establishment. Today,
sans the self-deprecating humor and theatrical visuals of Franco, the
surreal essence of Moschino is lost. What remains is a strange, undecipherable
mélange of unrelated influences worked into a meaningless procession
of clothes. Unfortunately, the audience is no longer laughing with Moschino.
The sparkly chiffon dress and metal studded mini leather
capelet ensemble that kicked off the show was an ominous beginning indeed,
but little did everyone know that things would quickly go from bad to
worse. The show’s seemingly never ending display of big blouson
tops with leg of mutton sleeves, nipped waist coats featuring scalloped
collars covering the shoulders, WWII military officer jackets, velvet
cuffed Capris, and silk neck-tie blouses was reminiscent of a nonsensical
dream sequence from a bizarre Matthew Barney (for those of you who don’t
know him, suffices to say that he is Bjork’s partner) film.
In the Franco years the Moschino name resonated with
an inimitable sense of irony. In light of that, the only viable --sort
of --explanation to the madness we witnessed on the Moschino runway this
season might be a Socratic reverse-irony. Meaning (bear with me here)
the collection’s genius parody of the ridiculous fashion folk (the
hedonistic editors, mindless consumers, and self-obsessed models) is
so deep that it is lost to us. But quite frankly, let’s not overestimate
this collage of uninspired clothes.
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