Morocco’s Agafay desert provides the backdrop for Saint Laurent’s latest menswear collection
Marrakech was a place of spiritual escape and inspiration for Yves Saint Laurent in his lifetime. This past weekend, current Saint Laurent creative director Anthony Vaccarello returned to Morocco for an awe-inspiring S/S 2023 menswear show held in the Agafay desert
- (opens in new tab)
- (opens in new tab)
- (opens in new tab)
- Sign up to our newsletter Newsletter
Morocco, particularly the ancient desert city of Marrakech, was a place of particular resonance for the late Yves Saint Laurent. During his life, the designer – himself born in neighbouring Algeria – spent large swathes of time in the country, first travelling there in 1966 with partner Pierre Bergé. They stayed at the then-dilapidated La Mamounia, now one of the city’s most luxurious residences, beginning a love affair which would last until Saint Laurent’s death in 2008. Of waking up in Morocco on that first day, Bergé wrote: ‘the birds were singing, the snow-capped Atlas Mountains blocked the horizon, and the perfume of jasmine rose to our room. We would never forget that morning, since in a certain way, it decided our destiny.’
Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello S/S 2023 menswear in Morocco
Indeed, Marrakech would become the house of Saint Laurent’s spiritual second home, the pair first purchasing Dar el-Hanch, a small house in the Medina, and later Sar Es Saada, close to the blue-walled Jardin Majorelle (by then it was the 1970s, when an influx of bohémiens arrived in the city from around the world). Marrakech began to seep into the house’s collections; Saint Laurent found growing inspiration in the cuts of traditional Moroccan dress, and the colours of its landscapes. ‘Once I grew sensitive to light and colours, I especially noticed the light on colours… on every street corner in Marrakech, you encounter astonishingly vivid groups of men and women,’ he said.
This past weekend – half a century on – current Saint Laurent creative director Anthony Vaccarello staged a return to Marrakech, inviting attendees to view his S/S 2023 menswear collection in a special runway show (following in Saint Laurent’s footsteps, guests stayed at the now-transformed La Mamounia, while also invited to view the various landmarks of the designer’s time in Marrakech during their stay). Taking place in the Agafay desert just outside the city, it was a dramatic spectacle befitting Vaccarello’s tenure at the house – in Paris, his womenswear shows take place in front of the Eiffel Tower, often timed for the landmark to erupt into flashing lights at its finale.
In the Moroccan desert, a different monolithic form provided an equally dramatic finale – a vast disk created by London-based artist and designer Es Devlin, which rose from the ground at the show’s end, emitting clouds of smoke onto the circular outdoor runway (the runway itself circulated a pool of water, like a desert mirage). The house noted that the show’s set was a reference to Paul Bowles’ 1949 novel The Sheltering Sky; ‘a ring-shaped luminous oasis amid the vast, arid unknown.’ In Bowles’ own words: ‘We think of life as an inexhaustible well. Yet everything happens a certain number of times, and a very small number, really… How many more times will you watch the full moon rise? Perhaps twenty. And yet it all seems limitless.’
The collection itself referenced what Vaccarello said was the ‘elegant dissolving’ of masculine and feminine codes, which he linked to the city of Marrakech, and Saint Laurent’s own inspirations from the city. The tuxedo – an intrinsic element of the Saint Laurent wardrobe – was reinterpreted across the collection, ‘imbued with possibilities’. He said it drew inspiration from his women’s collection earlier this year: sharp and wide across the shoulder, single or double-breasted, shapes also riffed on in boxy outerwear. Befitting the setting, the silhouette was louche: diaphanous shirts open to the naval, an elegant shawl-collar jacket and matching trousers in silk, tops which crossed over at the chest or tied at the neck with a pussy-bow.
But there was also a more personal element for Vaccarello, too, a look backwards not only into the house’s rich history, but his own life, and the clothes he wore as a student in Belgium. ‘It was how I dressed in 2000,’ he said of the collection’s elongated tailoring, trousers which sat high on the waist and wide on the leg. ‘It was a look that I loved, and I wanted to recreate that spirit; I was missing that.
INFORMATION
Jack Moss is the Fashion Features Editor at Wallpaper*. Having previously held roles at 10, 10 Men and AnOther magazines, he joined the team in 2022. His work has a particular focus on the moments where fashion and style intersect with other creative disciplines – among them art and design – as well as championing a new generation of international talent and profiling the industry’s leading figures and brands.
-
Longchamp unites with D’heygere on a playful collection made to ‘transform the everyday’
Inspired by Longchamp’s foldaway ‘Le Pliage’ bag, this collaboration with Paris-based jewellery and accessories designer Stéphanie D’heygere sees pieces that ‘transform and adapt’ to their wearer
By Jack Moss • Published
-
Last chance to see: Marc Newson’s all-blue designs in Athens
Gagosian gallery Athens presents new blue furniture and objects by Marc Newson
By Rosa Bertoli • Published
-
Sapir Bachar’s love for silver makes for abstract jewellery forms
Sapir Bachar’s fashion background informs her eponymous jewellery brand
By Pei-Ru Keh • Published
-
Mud pits to giant flowers, the best runway sets of S/S 2023
The most transporting show sets of the S/S 2023 season, from Demna’s pit of mud at Balenciaga to a giant fibreglass anthurium flower at Loewe
By Jack Moss • Last updated
-
New short film takes you behind the scenes at Margaret Howell
A Working Space provides a behind-the-scenes look at 34 Wigmore Street, Margaret Howell’s London headquarters, which celebrates its 20th anniversary this year
By Jack Moss • Last updated
-
Samuel Ross announces fourth chapter of Black British Artist Grant Programme
Awarding Black British talent across design disciplines, this week designer Samuel Ross of A-Cold-Wall* launches the latest edition of his artist grant programme which is accepting applications now
By Jack Moss • Last updated
-
In Memoriam: Issey Miyake (1938 – 2022)
We remember fashion designer Issey Miyake, who has died aged 84
By Jack Moss • Last updated
-
At rising label Ester Manas, one size fits all
‘It’s for a woman who really wants to be seen,’ says Ester Manas of her eponymous label, designed alongside partner Balthazar Delepierre, which is creating sensually minded clothing for women of all sizes
By Jack Moss • Last updated
-
132 5 Issey Miyake brings the ancient art of Japanese itajime to new collection
Travelling to Kyoto, Wallpaper* explores the story behind 132 5 Issey Miyake’s ‘Triangle Dye’ collection which brings a centuries-old dyeing technique – traditionally used for kimonos – to its innovative orgimani-esque designs
By Danielle Demetriou • Last updated
-
20 years on, Hedi Slimane returns to the Palais de Tokyo with Celine
Closing Paris Fashion Week Men’s, Hedi Slimane’s S/S 2023 menswear collection for Celine saw the designer return to the Palais de Tokyo, where he first showed 20 years ago with Dior Homme
By Jack Moss • Last updated
-
Paris Fashion Week Men’s S/S 2023: Loewe to Hermès
From Jonathan Anderson’s exploration of technology and nature at Loewe – complete with grass-sprouting clothing – to an Hermès collection which conjured ‘a bright, vibrant summer’ on a rainy day, the best of Paris Fashion Week Men’s S/S 2023, as it happens
By Jack Moss • Last updated