>> Paris Fashion Week: Chanel’s Accidental Muse- 24Olsen

March 3rd, 2008 - 24olsen

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It's hard to be Mary Kate Olsen. A lot of pressure is attached to being inspirational, even if that inspiration comes not from inner poetry or inherent grace but from a scraggly head of hair. You'd expect to see that type of hip mess from radical designers, but not at Chanel. Amy Winehouse is alleged to be the woolgather for that venerable institution, but it was Ms. Olsen's hair that became the accidental muse.

Hipness is very complex. Trying to unscramble the puzzle of cool is like trying to decode the biological basis of consciousness.

Remember when Catherine Deneuve was muse to St. Laurent? That was a perfectly reasonable relationship; who didn't aspire to look like the Venus of French cinema? Even Lagerfeld's old muse, Claudia Schiffer, had some similar selling points. But that was then, and now we take our muses where we can find them, raw from rehab clinics and the front pages of tabloids. Who has the last word in skid row chic? We like 'em anorexic, addled, and addicted. Our bedraggled fashion muses may be the visual equivalent of a bottle of Thunderbird, but this is completely defensible. Great art has come out of cheap wine and malignant culture. Trust me, we shouldn't have it any other way. If Mr. Lagerfeld wants to turn Mary Kate Olsen's unkempt hair into an aesthetic lobby, then we should stand up and cheer. Take a look in the mirror. Art always reflects both our best and our worst selves.

Mary Kate Olsen's messy mane was a subordinate clause of the Chanel Fall 2008 ready-to-wear collection. That collection was once again Chanel for the demoiselle, even if she appears to have aged slightly since the Spring 2008 outing. Chanel is a booby trap of a house where a designer must appeal to a clientele that ranges in age from 16 to 96. A designer must also never divorce himself from the weight of history while simultaneously keeping the biography current. The potential for polite calamity is what makes Lagerfeld so interesting to watch.

The primary aim of Chanel will always be keeping that golden bullet of a jacket as a principal weapon in the modern fashion arsenal; that is, to convince us that it is truly new and improved. This is, as you may intuit, a cheat: A Chanel jacket is not software or a cell phone or a missile guidance system. It may take a different silhouette, but functionally it is exactly the same. This time, Lagerfeld took two approaches in the name of innovation. In the first, he pulled in the waist and lengthened the bottom into a soft bell that was repeated in the sleeves. This was a mature treatment that caused the adolescent-looking models to appear as if they were engulfed in their mothers' St. John suits. What this means is that the suits were eminently wearable by society matrons and other such fabulous beasts. The second was a more traditional look at the classic shape, but with an interesting comment on reckless wealth. Only the very rich, Lagerfeld seemed to be saying, can slash wounds in their tweeds. Only they can get away with the type of affluenza in which luxury means so little that they can deface it on a whim; like burning hundred dollar bills and crashing Ferraris the point is not that you are rich enough to own the item, but that you are rich enough to treat it like waste.

The observer is complicit in this endgame, because it is he who allows himself the power to be shocked. Take away his response and the item returns to being a mere status symbol. It's a self-perpetuating cycle in which both parties require the full participation of the other.

The setting for this semiotic exercise was an oval wafer of a stage, in the center of which sat a working carousel. The carousel was decorated with those instantly recognizable tokens that make Chanel such a brand powerhouse: camellias, a pearl bracelet, a handbag, earrings, a hat, Chanel No. 5, and a ballet flat made into a sports car by perching it on wheels. It was a not-so-subtle reminder that accessories are the bread and butter of the couture houses.

Lagerfeld played with a tongued hemline this season. The curved outline wasn't as evocative in satin as it was in the thickness of a ribbed wool dress, where the heavier texture gave the garment the slab-like appearance of a radiation blanket. That shape also appeared--with little spatial logic--in tunics worn over long slit skirts and in a short-sleeved shift dress.

Since there is no such thing as true extremism at Chanel, the most daring ensemble was an evening duet that looked as if it belonged in the retro boudoir. Here, what appeared to be a Gay Nineties underpinning was topped by the sweep a '50s peignoir. This one link to lacy eroticism was a reminder that no matter the era, Chanel is not just a house built on a foundation of smartly tailored day wear.

This collection also proved that Lagerfeld well understands the concept of how to transfer a signature away from a logo without undermining the impact of the brand.

For whatever reason, the models were made up to look drained. While this may have been another shrug at industry, it was hardly a sign of health. Neither is chromatically inexcusable acid-lemon eye shadow. But these are the petty condemnations of the middle class. Even Ms. Olsen, eyes concealed behind a giant pair of sunglasses, can see that.

Images: TFS244592730

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