This represents a shift toward something visceral, and away from the Surrealism we saw at the beginning of the pandemic. The Surrealist art movement, which flourished between the World Wars, was focused on manifesting the subconscious in real life, and its practitioners often tried to achieve this through strange, and usually symbolic, juxtapositions of words or images that reframed accepted perceptions of the world. Famous examples include Elsa Schiaparelli’s shoe hat and the trompe l’oeil Tear dress she made in collaboration with Salvador Dalí.
Rather than run away with the circus, many people would like to run from it. At the couture shows, designers responded with more options for day, which was refreshing and in tune with a larger desire to get back to our routines. But in more fanciful looks, they also acknowledged that there’s still a circus-mirror aspect to life in 2021. In that case, it seems only natural to send in the clowns. The same dichotomy was active in the ready-to-wear collections, many of which featured collars, which seem optimized for the horizontal existence that is life on Zoom. Talk about a circus...
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