Tuesday, September 1, 2015

The ’90s Are Back? Sarah Mower Argues It’s Just Basic Math

Fashion people never believe that our reasons for liking things come down to something as simple and predictable as math. It’s all in our instincts, right? But there’s one simple algorithm that neatly explains why a rampant nostalgia for the nineties is running through the zeitgeist now. All you do is take today’s date, 2015, and subtract 25 (the age of today’s rising designers). Result: 1990, of course!

There’s a coming of age in which every generation finds itself reminiscing about its childhood, pondering what fashion was like in the days they can barely remember. Christian Dior, born in 1905, romanticized the Edwardiana of his mother’s day. Yves Saint Laurent, who was born in 1936, looked back on the forties. Tom Ford, born in 1961, has been working through his obsession with the sixties and early seventies for his whole career.

And so it goes, for today’s nineties kids. What are those vague memories of Mommy making sandwiches in a slip dress while you played in front of Power Rangers, Full House, and Pokémon? What was that black pantsuit she was always wearing when she rushed home from work to tuck you into bed? Do you remember sticking your feet into her New Balance trainers and staggering around her bedroom as a toddler? Verifying these semi-remembered images is tantalizingly difficult. Nineties fashion reporting lies mostly beyond the reach of Google, which was only created in 1998.

But lo! There are plenty of people who do remember the nineties out there—the designers who are now in their mid-40s and at the top of the tree. Apply the math again (subtract 25 from 2015) and we discover that Phoebe Philo, Nicolas Ghesquière, Raf Simons, Stella McCartney, Riccardo Tisci, and Gucci’s new creative director, Alessandro Michele, among others, were all in their 20s—out there, living it up at raves and underground clubs—in the nineties.

It’s perfectly logical, then, that so many references to the decade have started to resonate through fashion now. On the one hand, there’s a generation of designers growing up with a rediscovered reverence for nineties Galliano, who are researching David Sims, Craig McDean, and Corinne Day’s photographs of fresh-faced Kate Moss, Kristen McMenamy, Emma Balfour, and the “waifs.” And on the other, there are the eyewitnesses who are looking back on a time in their lives that represented spontaneity, freedom, individuality, and the thrill of ransacking the cheapest racks at the flea market for something cool to throw together.

Nothing ever looks the same the second time around, obviously. Once you’re keyed into it, though, what else but nineties teen spirit can explain the near absence of makeup and the flowing, undone hair at the Fall 2015 shows? Why is Alessandro Michele making such a hit with young customers, straight off the bat, by filtering Gucci through a geeky, beanie-hatted, downplayed, almost market-stall vintage-y sensibility? Aren’t Phoebe Philo’s satin lingerie-dresses with their ribbon-tie belts telling us something? Or the slip dresses Rag & Bone crammed on top of pants (so nineties style) in its show?

When it comes to young designers, the homages are even more frank. Vetements’s Demna Gvasalia and his collective of friends are enjoying runaway success rechanneling the deconstructed attitude of nineties-era Martin Margiela. Marta Marques and Paulo Almeida, showing greasy grunge hair, flashes of metallic gold Helmut Lang-ish tops, and rough-cut Christian Lacroix floral brocades, admit to serving a salad of nineties references, chopped up from copies of The Face and i-D they never saw the first time around. So popular is it with girls, they can hardly keep up.

But let’s cut this situation another way. Is this nineties feeling a fad, a mere mechanical function of the date on the clock? That would be to discount the emotion running beneath it, the instinct factor that distinguishes a seasonal blip from something with the makings of a movement. Combine the impulses of two generations—the one that has interest in obeying existing fashion rules, and the other that may be kicking against working within them—and what do we have? Something about what’s happening—the plea for casualness, youth, and a bit of raw-edged reality—reads as a deeply felt backlash against the Photoshop-perfect, relentlessly paced fashion system.

In the nineties there was more space to be human; ideas and personalities had time to develop. It was cool to be anonymous and just get on with your own thing with your friends. Sometimes we need to look back to go forward. Maybe it’s as basic as that.

Helmut Lang Spring 1997 / Marques ‘ Almeida Fall 2015
Photo: (from left) Courtesy of firstVIEW.com; Courtesy of Marcus Tondo / Indigitalimages.com


Maison Margiela Spring 2001 / Vetements Fall 2015
Photo: (from left) Courtesy of firstVIEW.com; Courtesy of Marcus Tondo / Indigitalimages.com


Perry Ellis Spring 1993 / 3.1 Phillip Lim Fall 2015
Photo: (from left) Courtesy of Condé Nast Archive; Marcus Tondo / Indigitalimages.com



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