Flame tattoos, thigh-high trainer boots and lingerie dresses: Louis Vuitton celebrates eccentricity on the French riviera

Lingerie dresses and thigh-high printed boots at Louis Vuitton Cruise 2019. - Getty Images Europe
Lingerie dresses and thigh-high printed boots at Louis Vuitton Cruise 2019. - Getty Images Europe

Aimé Maeght, the art dealer who fled Nazi-occupied Paris for the balmier climes of the French Riviera, is generally revered around those parts, not least for building his Fondation Maeght, a stunning modernist masterpiece by the Catalan architect Josep Sert, perched in the hills by Saint-Paul de Vence, and then stuffing it with work by his protégés and friends – Joan Miró, Fernand Léger, Alexander Calder, Alberto Giacometti, Georges Braque, Baltus and Pierre Bonnard. 

Locals admired him for enshrining the South of France’s artistic reputation, while they got on with the business of turning every last fishing village into a mecca of gaudy glamour. Artists adored him for conferring instant status (and high prices) on their work – even while some of them complained about the commercialisation of it all. Joan Miró in particular, although happy to cash the cheques, railed against the bourgeois nature of art and the cultural indulgence of the rich. Appreciation of irony was perhaps not Miró’s strongest suit.

louis vuitton cruise 2019 runway - Credit: Getty Images 
Mixed paisley prints were paired with thigh-high trainer boots. Credit: Getty Images

For all these reasons and more, the Fondation is the perfect spot for a 21st century fashion designer with one eye fixed firmly on posterity and one foot planted in popular culture.

Nicolas Ghesquiere, Louis Vuitton’s Creative Director, is that man – and clocking the historical, cultural and street-wear references in his collections has become an adrenaline-soaked spectator sport. The gold trimmed thigh-high trainer-boots; the flame tattoos painted onto the models’ third eyes, the jewel speckled flapper dresses, the Edwardian sprigged tunics, the space-age visor-sunglasses, the Paisley-esque printed silks, mixed with stripes and Vuitton’s sequinned Dammier check, the 90s lingerie-dresses, the 80s batwings and bloated, rounded shoulder-lines - or were they a nod to Miro’s hefty sculptures dotted throughout those lush gardens?

vuitton cruise 2019 - Credit: Getty Images
Metallic skirts were paired with chunky boots for Louis Vuitton Cruise 2019. Credit: Getty Images

And what was that? A bag decorated with Grace Coddington’s charming cat illustrations? Ghesquiere isn’t even a cat person, being more canine-inclined. But it turns out he has wanted to collaborate with American Vogue’s former fashion director for years. The show’s soundtrack was peppered with snatches of narrative from Coddington’s autobiography, voiced by the actress Jennifer Connolly, a long-time muse of Ghesquiere’s. Connolly was there, watching the show too, alongside Sienna Miller, Ruth Negga and Game of Thrones’ Sophie Turner. One detail struck me from the narration: Coddington apparently got her first mobile phone in 2006. How did she survive?

Nicolas Ghesquiere isn’t the first to show in an art museum. It has become a trend in itself. Maeght bolstered the reputations of his artists, and fashion brands fervently believe in the power of today’s art world to do the same for them.

Vuitton cruise 2019  - Credit: Getty Images
Silver-lined trainer boots featured throughout the collection. Credit: Getty Images

However Ghesquiere may be the first to claim it as his natural habitat. Since his second show for the house, five years ago, the Vuitton collections have been set in monumental galleries and architectural spaces around the world (including Louis Vuitton’s own imposing art foundation in Paris). It’s a bold, self-asserting declaration - fashion as art – and has become a central pillar of Vuitton’s identity. Most recently the house collaborated with Jeff Koons on a limited edition of LV monogrammed totes over-printed with Grand Masters chosen by Koons – the results of which became a huge talking point, with antis and pros weighing in vocally. All grist to Vuitton’s luxurious mill. The house has become a hub for creating media moments.

louis vuitton cruise 2019  - Credit: Getty Images 
Models on the Louis Vuitton Cruise catwalk sported flame tattoos. Credit: Getty Images

This was another. Miro would probably have adored trolling the bourgeois clients in the front row. But Ghesquiere’s clothes suit a museum context. There’s something monumental about their non-conformity – this collection, especially, “was about celebrating eccentricity,” he says. But all his collections have a slightly anarchic edge. When the models wove their way among the statues, those post-modern mash-ups and pumped up volumes, of which the designer is so fond, made perfect sense. These are brilliantly constructed clothes that aren’t interested in being “easy”. They want to hold their own in culturally important surroundings and on formidable looking women (the tone is set in the show: Ghesquiere’s models are unfailingly fierce looking and unsmiling). “The balance,” says Ghesquiere, “is to be in the moment but also timeless.” That’s a call only the future can make.