Demna’s Highly Anticipated Gucci Debut Lands in Milan

Milan Fashion Week has seen its share of entrances, exits, and expectations. But when Demna takes the reins of a house like Gucci, the industry holds its breath. The Georgian designer, known for redefining luxury through the lens of the everyday, has spent years building a world where a hoodie can carry as much weight as a gown. So what happens when that sensibility meets the marble halls of Italian heritage?

The answer, unveiled in a monumental, museum-like space surrounded by classical statuary, is less a revolution than a recalibration. Demna calls it Primavera, a palette of stylistic propositions for the people Gucci already speaks to, and those he hopes it will speak to next. It is a collection built on pragmatism, on clothes that require no pseudo-intellectual justification. They simply exist to be worn, to be enjoyed.

The clothes are about product. That is what Gvasalia keeps coming back to. Silhouettes, textures, materials. Lightness, ease, comfort. Body-aware shapes. There are seamless garments cut as close to the body as possible. Invisible heat-sealed edges. Engineered curved hems. Jackets appear multiple times. Low-cut jackets and horizontal pockets give things a streetwear posture. New shapes appear. Tracksuits merge into new forms. Leggings fuse with trousers. Jackets and tops become one ultra-fitted piece.

Footwear anchors the collection in the everyday. Manhattan, Demna’s first sneaker for Gucci, combines an ultra-minimal basketball shape with the slip-on ease of a mocassino. The Giovanni and Cupertino loafers erase the stiffness of traditional leather shoes, softening them into something that moves with you rather than against you.

Throughout the presentation, the soundtrack (five distinct genres curated by Loki) mirrors the collection’s juxtapositions. It is classical and contemporary, chaotic and cohesive, much like the mix of archetypes on the runway.

GUCCI celebrates 100 years with the ARIA collection and Balenciaga collaboration

Gucci is 100 years old. For the occasion, Alessandro Michele is designing a men's and women's fall-winter 2021-2022 show that highlights the brand's heritage through a plethora of pieces and accessories as daring as each other.

And because he never does things by halves, for his last show, he decided to appropriate the avant-garde spirit signed by Balenciaga by Demna Gvasalia and the hypersexualized aesthetic of Tom Ford of the Gucci era .


Balenciaga Fall 2020-21 show: The new silhouettes

After the Balenciaga fashion show, we noticed all the new masculine silhouettes that Demna Gvasalia proposes for fall-winter 2020-2021 :

Having in mind the heritage of the brand and the favourite color of Cristóbal Balenciaga, Demna unveiled strong black pieces along with the sporty effects, and new design proposals.

Balenciaga AW 2019-2020 at Paris Fashion Week

Demna did it again, as he managed to present us another fresh view of the ‘New’ Balenciaga era.

Showcasing more than 100 looks in total and with menswear being a very strong presence on the catwalk, he managed to deliver what his fans and the fashion world was expecting to see at Paris Fashion Week.

Noteable 90s elements, extra-wide shoulders, bold colours, clean lines and the ‘Demna’ tailoring on its best; here are some of our favourite menswear looks at Balenciaga Ready to Wear Collection.

photography: vogue.com