Fashion is undergoing a quiet revolution and Marine Serre is leading the charge. Divya Bala speaks to the designer redefining couture
CREATING. MULTIPLE. WORLDS.” The three words Marine Serre chooses to describe her design process are grandiose, perhaps, but not inaccurate. It’s the French designer’s ability to fuse disparate realms into new territory — at once futuristic and nostalgic, quotidian and couture, maximalist and refined — that has secured her position as one of the most captivating emerging talents in modern fashion.
“It really speaks of [this] generation,” Louis Vuitton artistic director Nicolas Ghesquière said of Serre’s aesthetic as he and the rest of the LVMH Prize jury (including Dior’s Maria Grazia Chiuri, the late Karl Lagerfeld and Phoebe Philo) awarded her the Young Fashion Designer Prize for 2017. The year’s youngest entrant, Serre had deeply moved them with her graduate collection, entitled Radical Call for Love and designed just months earlier in response to the political climate in Paris and Brussels post-2015/16 terrorist attacks, which took place during her final year at design school. Her hybrids of 19th-century dress and contemporary sportswear proposed a look that is both athletic and elegant, and her debut snagged ANDAM Fashion Award and Hyères Festival nominations, before she won the investment of fashion’s most discerning stockists, as well as the approval of the notoriously particular Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode in Paris.
Denne historien er fra August 2019-utgaven av Harper's Bazaar Australia.
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Denne historien er fra August 2019-utgaven av Harper's Bazaar Australia.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Grounded In Gotham
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Woman Of Influence Ingrid Weir
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CODE of HONOUR
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Stillness in time
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In the BAG
Aussie expat Vanissa Antonious from cult footwear brand Neous on going solo and stepping up her accessory offering.
uncut GEMMA
Forging her own path while paying it forward to the next generation, actor Gemma Chan is the (very worthy) recipient of the 2020 Women In Film Max Mara Face of the Future Award. She reflects on fashion, the Crazy Rich Asians phenomenon and red-carpet alter egos with Eugenie Kelly
THE TIME IS NOW
Esse Studios founder Charlotte Hicks’s slow-fashion model may just blaze a trail for the industry’s new normal. She talks less is more with Katrina Israel
COUPLES' THERAPY
Brooke Le Poer Trench ruminates on the trials and tribulations of too much time together
CALM IN A CRISIS
Caroline Welch was a busy woman who wrote a book on mindfulness for other busy women. Now, in the midst of a worldwide pandemic, she has started to take her own advice
ACCIDENTALLY RETIRED
As we settle into the new normal of lockdown, Kirstie Clements finds a silver lining in the excuse to slow down and sample the low-adrenaline lifestyle of chocolate digestives, board games and dressing down for dinner