Xavier Delcour's Lucky Number
By Timothy Hagy
PARIS, January 31 - Thirteen was the lucky number for
Xavier Delcour, whose show late Sunday evening packed the heat of his
earlier work. His razor-thin cut managed to be about one size smaller
than Dior Homme, and if there was a model with more than a 28" waist,
they were not discernable on the runway.
Some of Delcour's ideas - jacket collars that burst into fan-like
stitching when turned up on end, silver decoration that dangled
from shirt pockets, a military style double breasted peacoat that
hugged the torso - were just the thing for the peacocks among the
male species. One of the ideas, wrapping the waist and derrière
in unattached spiraling leather belts, proved more aesthetically
pleasing than practical, especially as one model lost his midway
down the catwalk. All the detail, and all the sparkle of the all-black
collection came at a price.
"My eyes are so tired," groaned Michael Roberts, Illustrator for the
New Yorker, on the way up to the Wilhelm presentation at the end of a long, long
Sunday. "I've been going to shows all day, and it's at the point I can't
look at another black outfit."
Later that same evening, on the Métro line 1, direction Château
de Vincennes, two of Delcour's androgynous models piled onto the train. The
dark curls of one were barely visible beneath the knit ski cap he had pulled
over his head, though that did not seem to bother his girlfriend, who was kissing
and hanging on for dear life. The other, a blonde American with features so
delicate that he seemed trapped between two sexes, was working his cellphone
in search of friends, perhaps with benefits. As they sprawled on two facing
seats, a clump of fashion editors arrived, one with pointy Helmut Lang booties
that looked as if they'd been snatched off the Wicked Witch of the West, and
the other in gold lamé tennis shoes. We all headed east together
as the bewitching hour approached - one big, contented Paris men's week
family.
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