Surrealism and female-focus dominate day at Paris fashion week

“I’ve always been a girls’ girl. All of my friends are women,” Victoria Beckham said at a preview of her latest collection, shown in Paris on Friday evening. “I make clothes that they want to wear and that I want to wear.”

 

In Paris, female designers are pushing back against an industry which has been backsliding into patriarchal control. A series of influential creative director roles in womenswear being awarded to men, most notably the appointment of Seán McGirr to replace the outgoing Sarah Burton at Alexander McQueen, has provoked criticism that fashion is being mansplained to women.

Beckham arrived in Paris on crutches – she broke her foot at the gym – but on the front foot, with her label in the black for the first time.

 

“Beauty is doing incredibly well, and now fashion in its own right has turned a profit. I feel that moving [the catwalk show] to Paris has really elevated the brand and now I can start building the house I’ve dreamt of.”

The hit of Paris fashion week so far has been the debut of 42-year-old Chemena Kamali at Chloé. Kamali’s success is being felt as a victory for the notion of fashion as a space for women to spend their time, energy – and money – focusing on and expressing themselves, and prioritising their own tastes and pleasures over those of others.

Naming her first collection Intuition, Kamali explained that she was “drawn to the woman-to-woman connection” represented by previous female designers at Chloé, including Phoebe Philo.

 

These women “fitted the clothes on themselves, intuitively questioning how things felt and what attitude they wanted to express – that was the magic formula”, Kamali told Vogue. The lace blouses and high-waisted jeans, blanket coats and soft leather boots delighted the audience, and phones at Chloé HQ have been ringing off the hook with calls from celebrity stylists.

Beckham, well aware that her own life is her label’s best advertisement, had hoped to wear her new “escalation” trousers, with an elongated wide cut “that makes the leg look extra long” on the day of her show. “But I’m a bit worried that if I catch one of my crutches on them, I might go flying and I don’t need another accident.”