French fashion house Dior on Thursday returned to live audience shows with a firework-punctuated presentation of its 2022 Cruise collection in Athens at the Panathenaic stadium, site of the first modern Olympic Games.
Watched by celebrities including film star Catherine Deneuve, model Cara Delevingne and Queen’s Gambit actress Anya Taylor Joy as well as Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou, the collection showcased designs inspired by antiquity and traditional Greek dress.
Greek artisans whose work was featured in the collection included a tailor and embroiderer from Argos in the Peloponnese, a silk factory in the northeastern town of Soufli, and a maker of fisherman’s caps from the port of Piraeus.
A model presents a creation during the rehearsal of the Dior's Cruise 2022 show in Athens.
“I am very interested in the craftmanship. It’s my passion,” Dior creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri said. “Each country has many different aspects in fashion,” she said. Cruise collections fall between usual spring/summer and autumn/winter collections — and French houses often visit other countries for the launch. The event in Athens “(blends) the power of heritage and contemporary inventiveness,” Dior said.
The peplos, the robe traditionally worn by women in ancient Greece, was a “key inspiration” for the show’s tunics, the fashion house said. The collection — mostly in black, white, grey, gold and blue — also included sportswear pieces and suits inspired by jackets and pants worn by Marlene Dietrich. The show took place 70 years after an iconic Dior shoot at the Acropolis.
“We are very proud to be here,” Chiuri said. “When I arrived in Dior I found the archive and I said, one day it would be great to realise again this trip in Greece. In some ways, it’s an anniversary,” she said. In addition to the Acropolis, Greek officials have permitted Dior photo shoots at the Odeon of Herodes Atticus, the Ancient Agora in Athens, the temple of Poseidon at Sounio and the temple of Zeus at Nemea. Chiuri said getting crowds back was a welcome feeling.
A model is being prepared during the rehearsal of the Dior's Cruise 2022 show.
The last show with spectators, a smaller affair, was in September. “We worked a lot with video, film, but it is completely different to have an audience at our fashion show. It’s like a concert,” she said.
“The guests are part of the show with us.” Last summer, Dior launched its cruise collection in Piazza del Duomo in Lecce in Italy. Meanwhile in yet another fashion event, lights, camera, real live audiences — Milan Fashion welcomes back actual people to its shows on Friday, a sign the industry is ready to start turning the page on virtual formats adopted during the pandemic.
The numbers are still modest, with only Armani, Dolce & Gabbana and Etro inviting an audience to their men’s Spring/Summer 2022 collections. “This is the dress rehearsal of the return to normalcy,” Federica Trotta Mureau, editor of the Italian Fashion magazine Mia Le Journal said.
The shows represent baby steps but the effect of the live events, instead of the video presentations or short films relied on since early last year when coronavirus cut short the twice-yearly shows in Italy’s business capital, would still be appreciated, Mureau said.
Agencies