An outsider’s view of Milan Fashion Week

This week the Men’s Spring/Summer 2020 Fashion Week is showing in Milan, and reminded me of my first experience of the Women’s Winter 2019 Milan Fashion Week in February this year, where I visited the sites of 5 fashion shows – Gucci, Fendi, Moschino, Versace and Dolce & Gabbana.  I was surprised how spread out these fashion shows were around Milan. I travelled for around an hour to Gucci’s compound in Via Mecenate in the southeast of the city, while Versace’s show was in a central city location, in the Palazzo Mezzanotte, the site of the Italian Stock Exchange (Borsa) in Piazza Affari.  Bottega Veneta’s show was held in a transparent marquee constructed behind the Arco della Pace in Piazza Sempione and Fendi’s invited guests queued on artificial turf laid outside their premises in Via Solari, about 40 minutes by tram from the city.

While I was studying in Milan I came to understand that over the years since 1985 the leading fashion design houses were constantly negotiating with the city for venues in central Milan where the fashion shows could be held.  At various times, the fashion houses were forced to present their shows outside the city at the fairgrounds.  This was unsatisfactory from the point of view of both the designers and key stakeholders such as Vogue. Ultimately the fashion houses searched for their own venues within the city and resisted the city’s numerous efforts to create fashion ‘precincts’ as part of urban redevelopment plans.

Since 2016 Gucci have hosted fashion shows and international buyer events at their own compound in south-east Milan and Dolce & Gabbana ended their venue search by acquiring an old cinema, the Metropole in Via Piave, which is now used for all their shows.

Milan Fashion Week was a very different experience overall to what I expected.  I imagined the city to be awash with #MFW banners and posters, and with top models posing outside the Milan Cathedral in the Piazza Duomo.  However, there were no obvious signs, and unless a fashionista, the visitor to Milan would not necessarily know that Fashion Week was occurring!  The only tell-tale signs were the parade of black town cars transporting VIPs to each show.

Fendi

Versace

D&G

 

 

 

 

 

 

Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana is the official representative for organising Milan Fashion Week and their website provided a calendar of events and locations. This gave me the perfect excuse to explore my new home city of only one month.  Using my Milan transit app I was able to plot routes to some of the larger designer venues. My first ‘show’ was Gucci, and having to take two trams to reach Via Mecenate I was really heading into new territory and didn’t know what to expect. I knew I was heading in the right direction when I was joined on the tram by fashion photographers and more than the usual number of passengers wearing Gucci monogrammed belts, jackets and handbags! The stylish appearance of my fellow tram passengers belied the fact that the ultimate destination to which we were heading turned out to be a nondescript building, a former aeroplane factory adjacent to the Jaguar brand headquarters.

Outside Gucci

While the locations for each individual fashion brand were scattered across Milan I came to understand that the crowds were mostly fans and social media groupies who followed each of the shows. Cameras and iphones clicked away furiously at, what I observed to be two distinct groups: official invitees who wore the brand and clutched oversized invitation envelopes; and fans who were dressed to stand out and pose for everyone with a camera!  It was a toss-up as to which group deserved the most attention. The invited guests convincingly exhibited the respective brand’s ethos in all manifestations – daywear or gala-ready ensembles.  The cluster of fans outside the perimeter of the carpeted ‘in-zone’ were equally flamboyant and outrageous.  While some were unashamedly fodder for social media photographers, others showed remarkable originality in their compositions!  What I eventually concluded was that it was the fun and vibrancy of fashion on the street that was as part of Milan’s appeal as the business of fashion here.

From my observation Milan Fashion Week was a ritual for exclusive gatherings of influencers and power-brokers.  However I also came to realise that these are in the main business events.  I think the fashion designers who stood their ground and opposed moves to dilute the business of fashion within educational, tourism or cultural platforms have preserved a framework that champions the legacy, and ensures the future, of Milan Fashion Week.

 

Mid-way through my 2019 Grand Tour of Milan

Well I’ve reached the half-way mark of my sojourn in Milan. What do I think so far? Its absolutely fabuloso!

Venice Carnivale

While the snow and freezing temperatures took its toll in the first month, the temperatures in Milan have now definitely improved. La primavera is well and truly setting a much warmer scene for the remainder of my stay.

It’s no surprise that I have learned a lot more about Milan since arriving. My Universita Cattolica subject, Reading Milan, is as interesting and revealing as I had hoped it would be. My lecturers have pointed out that reminders of Milan’s Roman and Medieval past are constantly being uncovered. Age-old skeletons have been unearthed as a new underground metro station is being dug alongside the Basilica Sant’Ambrogio to which Universita Cattolica is associated. Even under the Duomo metro station it is possible to see the original base of the Duomo Piazza and realize how much of the existing urban space has been layered and layered upon centuries-old foundations. Even within the Italian Borsa (Stock Exchange building) I was able to see through a glass sub-floor to the remains of Roman foundations during a rare weekend when the building was opened to the public.

Milan’s Duke in the left foreground

I have spent nearly every day since I arrived exploring different parts of the city, using its public transport system, either the metro or trams. Having a bucket-list of reasons to get around the city, such as hanging around Gucci’s compound during Milan Fashion Week show has helped expose me to areas outside the inner-Duomo and tourist precincts.

I was surprised to learn that Milan once resembled Amsterdam with a network of canals to enhance commerce and trade for its merchants until the Fascist government in 1920s decided that the canals were outdated and changed the urban landscape with a road network for modern motor vehicles.

I have been blessed to experience life-long dreams and absorb many beautiful treasures here, such as visiting Venice during Carnivale, attending a performance at Teatro La Scala, observing the goings-on outside 5 fashion houses during Milan Fashion Week, viewing some wonderful art exhibitions of Picasso, Paul Klee and the treasures of the Brera and Gallerie d’Arte Moderna.

I’ve loved seeing the Milanese’s affection for their pets and I have no problem sharing trams, cafes and elevators with dogs of all sizes and breeds, including Great Danes and British Bulldogs!

Dante’s Inferno: Francesca & Paolo

Do I feel like I’m starting to fit in? Well, my local barista now blows me a kiss each morning when he makes me my macchiato, and during a stroll through Sempione Park Marco, an architect from Florence, chatted me up. As it turned out he incorrectly thought the architect of the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II was also the architect of Arco delle Pace – when in fact one was Guiseppe and the other Luigi!

Just this weekend, I had the sense of taking a magical carpet ride on a visit inside Gucci’s Hub. This is the brand’s marketing complex located in Milan’s outer district in Via Mecenate. In the 1920s the premises were home to the Caproni aeronautical factory. Unfortunately no photos were allowed but the images will remain imprinted on my mind for some time! I will never forget walking into what was obviously an airplane hangar now metamorphosed into a formal banquet space while beyond a lavish and seemingly endless expanse of black draping were a large stage and it is in this compound that all of Gucci’s fashion shows are held. Surrounding a cloistered garden was a modern glass structure that housed showrooms for international buyers and six floors of offices. Again an image imprinted in my mind is walking through huge velvet red doors into a plush red-carpeted showroom complete with mannequins draped with examples from their collection, while handbags of every description were showcased along the walls. Definitely not allowed to touch! Apparently Gucci’s Creative Director, Alessandro Michele selected the vintage and eclectic mix of furniture that grace the buyer spaces and staff lunch area.

Milan’s Navigli canals

So, armed with a new Milano Moda hairdo and having watched Stramilano’s half-marathon from my apartment’s balcony this weekend, I am ready for the next stage of my race around Milano!  May it be a saunter rather than a sprint!

 

Hidden gem at Gucci Brisbane

Gucci is definitely my designer store of choice in Brisbane.  The boutique not only has a vast array of handbags and wallets as you would expect, but it gets my tick for stocking a selection of clothing and shoes from Gucci’s current collections.

I buy from designers on occasion (Chanel, Balenciaga, YSL, Dior) and I always like to browse in their boutiques so I can see their new collections and touch the fabrics.  A recent Gucci purchase ticked all my boxes, for quality as expected and in this case versatility too, but it ticked an added box for the fun I had in making the purchase.

That was because I discovered a little gem at Gucci – the rack in the back! A rack which sported substantial savings.  While I was admiring the latest collection I was asked by the sales attendant in a professional yet almost conspiratorial manner if I’d like to see what was on this covert rack.  He wasn’t the least bit condescending and even though I knew I would not be offered new season’s designs I still felt as though I was being treated to a special viewing.

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Photo courtesy: style.com

And naturally I found a few pieces of interest on this special rack, including a stylish cocktail dress in russet silk from Gucci’s Fall 2013 Ready-to-Wear collection.

The rack savings were so generous that I must have spent a good 40 minutes trying on various items and the salesman, always courteous, was also listening to me, as to what I like to wear and how I like to look.

My final choice was between a black cocktail dress and a stunning silk-wool blend pencil skirt with inverted pleat, complete with sexy slit at the back and large bow detail at the waist.

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Image courtesy: farfetch.com

I eventually chose the pencil skirt but not before I teamed it with a matching sleeveless, high-necked blouse.  This is where the versatility came in.  I bought two new pieces but achieved multiple outfits – I can wear them as separates for different looks or together, giving me the same seamless silhouette as a dress.