Dauphinette was founded in 2018 as “The Happiest Brand on Earth” and longtime followers will remember the pressed flowers and bright prints that marked early collections. While bright colorways and a tendency toward the whimsical were still an important mainstay of this collection, the brand marked a departure from the light and airy, to the deep and exploratory.
“I’m a practicing vegetarian in a ferociously carnal state of mind,” Cheng detailed in show notes. In a world that is certainly far from flowery and light, Dauphinette is answering audiences’ yearning for work that is rawly original, and which communicates daring assertions on how life can be lived.
Upcycling was the unspoken extra guest in the room, with a list of upcycled materials that reads like a menagerie itself, including lambskin leather, cow leather, goat fur, shark teeth, and coque feathers alongside use of reclaimed materials such as wool, cashmere, mohair, and kimono silks.
A standout look was a dress composed completely of neck ties, while a kindred dress was draped in a meadow’s worth of vintage millinery flowers and glass beads. A few handbags were created from vintage volleyballs and basketballs – an ode to “The Happiest Brand’s” more playful origins, perhaps.
Hosted at the historic landmark of St. Mark's Church-in-the-Bowery, the show presented the latest in a long legacy of arts activations at the site, from experimental film screenings and avant-garde theater in the '60s, up to today’s weekly organizing around The Poetry Project. As the rat race of the East Village – honking cars, tourist excursions, loud bar music – whirred along outside the church, Dauphinette was building a next-generation animal kingdom in its new offerings, ready to be unleashed into the world.