A walk of fame for Saint Laurent's greatest hits - from the wool crepe Mondrian dress, and Braque-inspired beaded jackets, to the Le Smoking tuxedo - the retrospective places Saint Laurent's work amongst the Bowes' own fashion collection dating back to Saint Laurent's beloved Second Empire. So, a searingly saucy black dress with a lace window in the back (autumn/winter 1970) appears next to pieces of 19th century Chantilly lace and a lace-trimmed gown belonging to the Empress Eugenie.
The telling of such a remarkable story was made possible through a collaboration with the Fondation Pierre Bergé - Yves Saint Laurent, which loaned precious items from its 5,000-piece collection in Paris. Saint Laurent's long-term partner in business and in life, Pierre Bergé, was at the museum for its opening, happy to reflect on the revolution started by Le Smoking and navigating life alongside such a creative wildfire as Saint Laurent.
"Today everyone is talking about gender. Yves decided to pass the power from the men's shoulders to the women's," he revealed. "We never interfered with each other, I never went to his studio. I decided to respect the creation before the business."
Looking back and forward at the fashion business, both during Saint Laurent's career and since, Bergé wryly added: "When we started, Yves and I, the word we never heard was marketing." For those wistful for a time when fashion was seriously, fabulously free, Yves Saint Laurent: Style is Eternal is the perfect trip.
Yves Saint Laurent: Style is Eternal is on at The Bowes Museum, County Durham from July 11 to October 25.
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