The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Jean Paul Gaultier has added a talent to its guest designer programme, tapping Shayne Oliver — the co-founder of Hood By Air who left the design collective last year — to design a ready-to-wear capsule for the Paris-based brand.
In a collection of around 50 items seen by BoF featuring distressed, gauzy overlays, bumster silhouettes, ultra-wide-leg denim and the logos of imagined streetwear labels like “GLTR Sportswear,” Oliver turns an eye informed by New York counterculture to the gothic romance, extreme drama and lighthearted kitsch present in Gaultier’s archive.
Gaultier plans to launch the collection in New York on May 6 — the same night as the Met Gala — throwing an after-hours party for the project on American fashion’s biggest night.
Oliver says he drew inspiration from the way Gaultier shook up the fashion establishment in the 1990s by putting casual staples like denim on the couture catwalk. The era mirrors his own approach to fashion: his previous work at Hood By Air transformed foundational elements of American street style like T-shirts and durags, exaggerating and twisting them to create a bracing blend of social commentary and runway couture.
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“I didn’t want the collection to be about swag-ifying something high brow. It felt more organic for me to critique the things I find important in the modern wardrobe, and amplify that,” Oliver said in an interview by phone. “There was a lot of common ground there.”
The collection about “utilitarianism, femininity, power and play” is designed to be worn “from couture to the bedroom floor,” Oliver said.
The provocative, yet wearable line could help revive awareness for Gaultier’s more elevated ready-to-wear propositions after years in which the most visible elements of the brand were either its theatrical haute couture looks, or at the other end of the spectrum, sailor-striped T-shirts and perfumes that generate the majority of sales.
Jean Paul Gaultier suspended its ready-to-wear operations in 2014, and the designer stepped back from designing his house’s haute couture shows in 2020. Since then, the brand (owned by Spanish perfume giant Puig) has leaned on a guest designer programme that’s featured Sacai’s Chitose Abe, Y/Project’s Glenn Martens, Simone Rocha, Haider Ackermann and Olivier Rousteing to create haute couture collections for the house.
The brand has also quietly built back up its presence in ready-to-wear with a mix of accessible capsules inspired by its haute couture outings, reissued archival looks and collaborations with brands like London-based KNWLS.
Owner Puig, whose net revenues reached €4.3 billion last year, recently confirmed plans to raise €2.5 billion in an initial public offering in the Spanish stock exchange. The deal will allow its founding family to retain the “vast majority” of voting rights, the company has said.
Shayne Oliver speaks to BoF about the rise and fall of Hood By Air, how the American fashion system thwarts creativity and his plans to relaunch his brand.
Shayne Oliver’s Hood by Air has unleashed one of the most compelling new looks in fashion. But the aesthetic — not Oliver’s alone — is the result of an alliance of image-savvy collaborators.
The creative often credited with pioneering luxury streetwear has stepped away from design duties at the brand he founded. From his new base in Berlin, Oliver is now focused on a constellation of projects under the nascent Shayne Oliver Group.
Robert Williams is Luxury Editor at the Business of Fashion. He is based in Paris and drives BoF’s coverage of the dynamic luxury fashion sector.
Revenues fell on a reported basis, confirming sector-wide fears that luxury demand would continue to slow.
IWC’s chief executive says it will keep leaning into its environmental message. But the watchmaker has scrapped a flagship sustainability report, and sustainability was less of a focus overall at this year’s Watches and Wonders Geneva.
The larger-than-life Italian designer, who built a fashion empire based on his own image, died in Florence last Friday.
This week, designers, collectors and major fashion brands will flock to Milan’s design fair. Also, LVMH reports first-quarter sales.