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Is this the New "New"?: Enfants Riches Déprimés SS24

The designer has candidly confessed that he creates for his own sake, "not for the consumer.” A kid that got kicked out of Swiss boarding school now dressing those who've similarly been dismissed — or liberated. It's all a matter of interpretation, like Levy's garments.

 

The presentation, held at the historically suppressed Protestant church, l'Oratoire du Louvre, was chosen for its grand scale and play with light and darkness. It commenced with a performance by Mae Markl, a murder that left no bloodshed, as the baby doll beside her lingerie-clad body was artificial. This served as a nod to the fragility within, doubling as an extension of the brand's rejection of reproduction. 

 

The funeral procession showcased a lineup seamlessly connected by a sharply tailored red thread. Silk danced in juxtaposition with heavy leather usage, a thoughtfully devised contrast, while impeccably polished suits were adorned with an abundance of safety pins throughout the entire collection. Skirts, some featuring unfinished raw linings, were daringly short, and stockings climbed provocatively along exposed legs.

 

When asked about his design approach, reminiscent of Kathy Acker's calculated linguistic artistry in 1970s LA, Levy detailed his transversal process, beginning with a painting or collage. "Then I craft a jacket. I befriend it. I continue this process one piece at a time until I've assembled a room full of friends conversing in the same language, an insider communication with external objects."

In my heart and soul though, my purpose is to create, not to destroy.

His expressions are as compile as his garments. And so is his feelings towards Paris, refusal and approval constantly overlapping one another, much like the leather and the silk. He confesses that he feels, "constantly bogged down by Europe and Paris. [He] loves it, then hates it, then loves it, then hates it again and leaves. Then [He] comes back to show [his] work." The pain is important to his process.

 

Despite Levy's anarchic approach and the high price tags attached to his creations, the collection remained surprisingly wearable. Meticulous attention was bestowed upon every detail, and David Friend's styling skillfully bridged the gap between lambskin and virgin wool, balancing the wild with the delicate. Key details included studded belts, spoon earrings, corsets, collars made of cigarette buds and Christian pins, and even Narcotics Anonymous tags that adorned a chainmail bralette — pastiches composed of found objects with their own histories.


In a world where everything seems like a simulacrum, and novelty appears as mere nostalgia, is this then, the new "new"?

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