Alexander McQueen fw 1998 'Joan' sequin jacket

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Alexander McQueen fw 1998 'Joan' sequin jacket
Alexander McQueen spring/summer 2005 rtw photographed by Tim Walker
Alexander McQueen s/s 2012 rtw Creative Director Sarah Burton Model Josefien Rodermans Makeup Artist Peter Philips Hair Stylist Guido Palau Casting Director Jess Hallett Newest Cool
A midsummer night’s dream quote. Act 1, scene 1.
“LOVE LOOKS NOT WITH THE EYES BUT WITH THE MIND”
Gaga x McQueen
Shaun Leane Armour Glove for Daphne Guinness 2011
the beautiful madness of Lee McQueen
let’s talk about genius. a real, unfiltered genius.
Alexander McQueen didn’t just design clothes; he orchestrated emotional releases on the runway, putting his deepest vulnerabilities on display. he is the ultimate proof of Hans Prinzhorn’s theory on the symbiotic link between psychological suffering and artistic expression. Prinzhorn believed that the deepest, most chaotic corners of the human psyche hold the highest creative power, and Lee lived that reality. it’s devastatingly beautiful and tragic: it feels like the more he suffered psychically, the more extraordinary his creations became. he turned his inner storms into wearable art, transforming pain into voss, plato’s atlantis, and highland rape. he bled for his art, and we just watched in awe.
where did the gods go?
remembering Lee makes me realise something: looking at the fashion industry right now… man, we are starving.
the current generation of fashion is completely devoid of that raw, visceral genius. ever since the golden era of the late 90s and 2000s faded away, fashion became safe. it became sterile, corporate, and obsessed with algorithms and tiktok trends rather than soul-shattering concepts. we are deeply in need of creators who aren't afraid to make people uncomfortable, who don't care about being "commercially viable" first, and who treat a runway like a sacred theater of human emotion. just like Lee did.
"i want to empower women. i want people to be afraid of the women i dress." - Alexander McQueen
fashion is so deeply thirsty for another McQueen. a rebel. a visionary. someone who can look into the abyss and come back with a collection that changes the world. we don't just miss him; the industry needs someone like him to wake it up from this creative coma.
rest in poetry, Lee. they could never duplicate your mind.
Givenchy, Spring 1997 by Alexander McQueen.
Givenchy Spring Couture '97 was McQueen's debut collection at the mega-label. He took the job after Galliano announced exited from the brand after just 2 years. McQueen was a controversial choice for a pleothra of reasons. One of them being that he was quoted to say, he had "no respect for Hubert de Givenchy" and had taken the job only because he "loves fashion." For a storied house, especially one in the traditionalist fashion world, this was largely disrespectful.
Executing this collection in just 3 months, McQueen chose a white and gold color palette, which the Givenchy brand was known for. However, the collection retains McQueen DNA with a slew of femme fatales and an emphasis on tailoring. Tailoring and an emphasis on the strength innate in females are two things McQueen was known for in his design language. When taking the job, McQueen had made it abundantly clear that he was not there to please the women of Givenchy.