McQueen has always been a designer whose concepts
and imagery have courted media controversy. Sometimes (especially with the
provocative imagery at the start of his career) this controversy is deliberate
but this A/W 1995 collection, entitled ‘Highland Rape’ (see the full show here), is possibly the best
example of McQueen’s vision being misinterpreted and sensationalised by the
media. Upon seeing the collection, journalists clambered over each other to be
the first to denounce the designer as a ‘misogynist’ – an insensitive idiot
glorifying rape to gain media coverage. The backlash was enormous, and it was
only when the designer began to give interviews on the collection’s real
meaning that the press began to thaw. The collection was not a testament to
rape – instead it was a visual commentary on England’s violation of Scotland.
It wasn’t the first time that the designer had
used shock tactics to captivate his audience but it was arguably the most
effective; the collection is often hailed as McQueen’s ‘breakthrough’ and one
that cemented his reputation as fashion’s ‘enfant terrible’. Whilst many
criticised him by claiming style over substance, it would appear that this
criticism stemmed only from the spectacular runway shows that were fast
becoming a trademark. One look at the clothes themselves reveals a huge amount
of versatility – from blue latex bumsters and ripped tartan gowns through to
turquoise lace dresses and tailored pencil skirts, the collection itself was a
perfect example of McQueen’s versatility as a designer.
There were also several references to McQueen’s
own Scottish heritage, references which were frequent but managed to stay on
the right side of cliché. Of course there was tartan aplenty and the obligatory
argyle socks, but the aesthetic was far from traditional. One of my personal
favourite looks was a tartan lace-up top with a black back, teamed with a
voluminous full skirt made from what appeared to be slashed green rubber,
whereas another model wore a black top accessorised with a tartan ruff.
The show finale was also typically McQueen in
its drama and symbolism. Two models walked the runway consecutively – the first
wore a cropped black top, exposing both her midriff and the full extent of her ‘bumsters’
and from the collar of her top protruded an array of feathers which almost entirely
obscured her face. She was aggressive, she was enigmatic and she was confident.
The second woman wore a black form-fitting dress that grazed knee-length – it was
the atypical ‘LBD’, in some ways the epitome of femininity. However, the dress
was ripped open at the chest revealing her entire left breast and she stumbled
down the runway feebly trying to retain her modesty as the steely model in the
feathers looked on menacingly from the end of the runway. The imagery was
obvious – the first model represented England, the latter represented a
Scotland that had been shaken to its core but the imagery was also provocative,
memorable and – as critics’ responses showed, universal. The beauty of McQueen is
that he manages to take obscure or personal concepts and present them using
imagery that can be interpreted in many different ways, inviting the audience
to form their own opinions.
In essence, any McQueen show is essentially theatre
and the models themselves oozed personality; looking either battered and
dishevelled or snarly and pissed-off, it was clear that the models were part of
the casting process as opposed to faceless clothes-horses (a worrying custom in
the fashion industry). With long, matted hair and relatively little make-up,
there was little to distract from the clothes themselves apart from the glaring
neon-blue contact lenses that pierced the eyes of the front row. The defiant
stance and aggressive nature of the models seem to be the perfect embodiment of
McQueen’s relationship with the press at the time – he saw the headlines, he
registered the information, he remained unfazed.
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