Ophelia Goes To Glastonbury - Dries Van Noten SS15

Wednesday 5 November 2014

The ethereal musings of Belgian designer Dries Van Noten during Paris Fashion Week provided the fashion sphere with a stimulating arrangement that proves that brands that are not solely revenue led can still contribute to the contemporary artistic avenues of high fashion.


























Van Noten only brings out two womenswear and two menswear collections a year, juxtapose to most that often bring out up to six collection with many showing cruise collections. The enigmatic Belgian embraced the beauty and quality of fabrics and their processes, mentioning that “It’s not really a collection, it’s just a lot of nice clothes in very nice fabrics”.

The joy of his work aesthetic that has gone into producing the collection is subtly prolonged via a subdued frenzy of gossamer garments that underlined the vulnerable yet artistic context of the showing.



An element of the collection that ignited my ‘fan-girl’ notions for the brand lay in the supposed inspiration. A long time pre-Raphaelite art enthusiast like myself was thoroughly indulged by the influences that mainly included a painting I have been smitten of for a substantial period.


John Everett Millais’s interpretation on Shakespeare’s Ophelia was fully synthesised in the collection whilst being credible on a ready-to-wear basis. The painting depicts the tragic female figure of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, upon which she floats upon a floral ridden river in an attempt to end her life.


The botanical environment of the fictional femme fatale speaks volumes alongside the sheer florals paraded in the collection. The movement in her ivory dress as the current of the water dictates it and the symbolism of each of the flowers adds immeasurable depth to not only the story but in the imagery that is replicated by Van Noten.



The wilted poppies represent death whilst the willow, nettle and daisies are associated with forsaken love, pain and innocence. The pansies paint the ideology of love in vain and the chain of violets worn around her neck stand for either faithfulness, chastity, death of the young or all of the above.


The depth of inspiration also touched on more of Shakespeare’s prose with A Midsummer Night’s Dream cited as inspiration as well as the mythical yet contemporary carefree girl who would whimsically lay her head upon the stone circles of Glastonbury in the ebony backdrop of a Somerset evening each July.


Nymph-like models serenely engulfed the make-shift mossy forest floor in golden organza jackets so intricate it looked like they have been developed by silk worms. Muted rainbows in horizontal patterns were consistent whilst tiered chiffon dresses with the thinnest of spaghetti straps brought on an epiphany of hippie optical illusions.


As the finale was upon us, the diaphanous details of each outfit meshed to create a vivid scene and the models ever so casually lounged against the grassy peaks as the lighting created a dusky backdrop with a leafy palette and the sun escaping through the gaps of the faux foliage.


During the frenzied, androgynous and innovative environment that we have come to know during fashion weeks, Van Noten was a breath of fresh air as he purely wants to curate beautiful clothes and upon dissection of his collection, his roots in Antwerp shone through, something I'm sure he would have wanted to have been highlighted