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Mexicans Hail Paris Designer Amid Cultural Appropriation Row

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Italian designer Maurizio Galante gave a lesson on Sunday, 31st June 2019. He taught how to take inspiration from indigenous cultures without being accused of cultural appropriation.

 

This followed the recent brouhaha in the fashion world this month. The Mexican government made legal threats against New York-based label, Carolina Herrera, for “ripping off” native designs. Galante then gave Mexican artisans top billing in his Paris haute couture show.

 

He worked with Mexico’s top fashion institute and also makers in 18 parts of the country on a collection. The collection picked up on the ongoing sartorial dance between Aztec, Mayan and other native cultures and Europe.

 

The show had a Mexican politician and officials in the front row giving their seal of approval. Galante then sent out trouser suits inspired by the Aztec god of learning Quetzalcoatl — the “feathered serpent” rendered in silk organza scales — and the jaguar deity Tezcatlipoca.

 

Each of his 21 highly-worked looks come with a spectacular halo of sun-shaped straw and metal jewellery made by indigenous artists Antonio Rendon Cornelio and Carlos Piedras.

 

Kahlo headdresses

Galante called the collection “Resplandor” after the Tehuana ceremonial headdress immortalised by the Mexican painter Frida Kahlo in her self-portraits.

 

He included a few of his own. He also said that legend has it that indigenous women created them by putting European dresses that washed up in a trunk on their heads.

 

The Paris-based creator said it was this “mix and the clash between the native cultures and that of the arriving Europeans” that made Mexico such a rich cultural crossroads.

 

“Silks and other materials coming from the East also came through Mexico first which added another level” of colour and texture, said Galante. The designer visited the country four times on research trips working with a Mexican NGO.

 

Before putting the intricate clothes together in his Paris studio, including bolero jackets made with tiny woven maize baskets — traditionally used for necklaces — he consulted Mexican experts to find the best artisans.

 

Hidden ‘soul’ of its makers

Galante said he turned a finely embroidered coat inside-out to show the hidden “soul” of the garment and highlight the genius of its makers.

 

Mexican MP Julio Carranza Areas from the ruling left-wing National Regeneration Movement also sat in the front row to support the show.

 

He said Galante had been open and included Mexican groups and officials in his process from the start. This was unlike Herrera’s US designer Wes Gordon.

 

Areas felt that Galante was showcasing the “work of Mexican hands”. It was unlike Venezuelan-born Herrera who “did not give credit” where it was due.

 

Cultural appropriation of native designs has become a political hot potato in Mexico. There are a long list of labels accused of ransacking the cultural heritage of poor villagers.

 

Galante refused to be drawn into the controversy. He worked with Moroccan women on his collection that was based on the kaftan.

 

He said, speaking on the controversy and also cultural appropriation,

“Every show, I try to tell the story of a different voyage. Like the great travellers for the 18th century, you go into the unknown, not knowing what you will find. I am not someone who invades a country to steal things, I am looking for a dialogue.

 

“I can’t speak for others, but when someone invites you to their table for dinner, you have to respect their rules. It is normal that I respect the local culture and not abuse it.”

 

Haute couture is the very pinnacle of fashion. Only an elite band of designers are allowed to show their luxurious handmade creations in the French capital. Some of them consequently cost tens of thousands of euros (dollars).

 

SourceAFP

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