Don't Look Back In Anger: Hedi Slimane For Celine at The Wiltern Theater In Los Angeles

text by Oliver Kupper

At Celineโ€™s Women Winter 2023 collection presentation, we learned that Iggy Pop is still the second comingโ€”even at seventy-five. And also, Hedi Slimane is one of the most important couturiers of our generation. He is fashionโ€™s enigmatic zelig, always in the right place and always at the right time. Last night it was the Wiltern Theater in Los Angeles, an Art Deco landmark cladded in blue-green glazed architectural terra-cotta tiles on the corner of Wilshire and Western that was built in 1931 for vaudeville. The most Instagrammable moment in this shangri-laโ€™s recent memory was an ode to a pre-Instagram eraโ€”the โ€œAge of Indieness.โ€ Celineโ€™s runway show at the iconic theater, which was advertised with a blitzkrieg media buy across the city, on billboards and bus stops, opened with a larger than life Celine logo, decked out in disco lights that unfolded from the rafters, and a pulsating 20-minute original recomposition of the White Stripesโ€™ iconic 2000 track, โ€œHello Operator.โ€ After the finale, and a brief intermission, there were performances by The Strokes and Interpolโ€”with an explosive opening act from Iggy Pop and some of his most iconic songs. He spit, he touched himself, his skin golden and wrinkled from Floridian rays and a lifetime of abusing his body on stage. The collection itself hit all of Slimane's familiar notes and silhouettes with variations on a theme: slim pants, tailored blazers, military jackets, glimmering gowns and hand-embroideryโ€”his sartorial rebellion against the status quo, a love letter to rock nโ€™ roll and the glamor of nightlife. If these notes sound familiar it is because Slimane is a fervent believer in repetitionโ€™s power to cement a designerโ€™s modus operandi. In a recent conversation with Lizzy Goodman (author of Meet Me in the Bathroom: Rebirth and Rock and Roll in New York City 2001โ€“2011), Slimane says, โ€œ...Repetition and consistency, quoting yourself, is key to creating the condition of the crystallization of a style and the longevity of it.โ€ He continues, โ€œThe vocabulary may change with the time, but the syntax, the style, stays unchanged.โ€ It may mystify some why Slimane continues to romanticize and harken back to this post-911 era of war and bloodshed in the Middle East and a burgeoning fiscal collapse. But a disillusioned pining for a confused golden age is not what Slimane is afterโ€”he is constantly searching for that clarion call for belonging. Last night at the Wiltern was proof-positive that music can be that call, and that musical movements of bygone eras were a result of this desire for communion. The question shouldnโ€™t be why look back? The question should be why not look back. Fashion is constantly referencing itself. If done right, it can be timeless and beautifulโ€”electrical even. Slimane quotes Carl Jung and his ideas around synchronicity for his timelinessโ€”his collaborations with David Bowie, Mick Jagger and countless young, burgeoning musicians. His stark black and white images captured their regal visages with a crisp, eternal quality. Slimane tells Goodman, โ€œI was surfing a wave without knowing where it would take me.โ€ The wave eventually took him to Los Angeles at the height of Southern Californiaโ€™s indie scene, which grew around the time of the 2008 financial crisis. In 2016, a debilitating case of tinnitus forced him out of Los Angeles and to the more peaceful climes of Southern France. But with his most recent collection for Celine, Slimane is still blurring the line between the stage and real life, and he is still looking back, but never in anger. On the attitudes that defined the turn of the 21st century, Slimane says, โ€œ...Twenty years after, we can see it as a statement on disguise, a manifesto on the value of chaotic insouciance and stylish nonchalance.โ€ He calls the amalgamation of fashion and live performance a โ€œliturgical ritual.โ€ At the Wiltern, all of this and his brilliance was on display.

Watch CELINE 15 "DYSFUNCTIONAL BAUHAUS" Men's SS23

CELINE 15
Palais De Tokyo
Paris, France
June 26th, 2022
DYSFUNCTIONAL BAUHAUS

Artworks by David Weiss, Alyss Estay, and Renata Petersen


Original soundtrack for Celine
โ€œDesignโ€ Performed, written, and Arranged by Gustaf and produced by Chris Coady
Commissioned and co-produced by Hedi Slimane

Casting, Styling, and Set Design by Hedi Slimane

Hair Stylist
Esther Langham

Hair Colorist
Alex Brownsell

Makeup
Aaron De Mey

Watch Celine Homme's "BOY DOLL" From Their Winter 2022 Presentation

Shot and directed by Hedi Slimane, Celine Hommeโ€™s Winter 2022 presentation takes place in one of Parisโ€™s most emblematic venues. Lโ€™Olympia, known internationally for staging some of the worldโ€™s finest operas, plays, and concerts was established in 1893 in the 9th arrondissement and is the cityโ€™s oldest music hall. It was converted into a cinema in the 1920s after the market for theatrical performance experienced a sorrowfully steep decline. However, in 1954, the Olympia hosted a grand venue reopening under the executive direction of French Producer Bruno Coquatrix, and since then has hosted countless legendary concerts from the worldโ€™s greatest musical artists, both domestic and abroad.

An original soundtrack titled โ€œFAVORITE THINGโ€ was composed by the Swedish band SHITKID 
Casting, Styling and Set Design by Hedi Slimane
Hair Styling by Esther Langham
Makeup by Aaron De Mey