Parisian Style & Indian Craftsmanship Are At The Heart Of Dior’s 2023 Fall Runway Show
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Dior
For Dior’s Creative Director, Maria Grazia Chiuri, each collection offers an opportunity to weave new connections between the savoir-faire of ancestral traditions and cutting-edge innovation. Finding a new ingenious way of talking about feelings and emotions that can connect us with a country and its culture is precisely what Chiuri wished to accomplish in this Fall 2023 collection, with a view to explaining the collaboration, work relations, and friendship linking her for many years to India and Karishma Swali, who directs the Chanakya ateliers and the Chanakya School of Craft, in Mumbai. A place of exchange, study, and emancipation for many women, a laboratory to explore different types of savoir-faire that the Creative Director of Dior women’s lines has long celebrated, highlighting thus the visionary spirit of the founding couturier.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Dior
Dior presented their Fall 2023 Collection in Mumbai, India, this past weekend which passes on and perpetuates incomparable customs through this new large-scale collaboration between India and France. The archives reveal Dior models created by Marc Bohan, the then Artistic Director, who traveled to India in April 1962, notably to Mumbai and Delhi, initiating conversation between France and India. For Bohan, these presentations were significant events, heralding a new departure under his artistic direction: younger customers, and a more dynamic, contemporary approach to fashion and ready-to-wear.
Maria Grazia Chiuri has chosen color palettes and materials that crystallize key influences shared with Karishma Swale of Chanakya. Chiuri works on timeless clothing forms that have stayed intact through time, allowing her to re-design her favorite models. A color block sequence dedicated to silks – in shades of green, yellow, pink, and purple –, in homage to Marc Bohan, is embodied by sophisticated evening coats, sari-inspired straight skirts, and traditional Indian cuts, as well as pants, boleros, jackets, and tops: a veritable sartorial genealogy defined by different heritages and fashion cultures.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Dior
The collections embroidery – both protagonist and search engine, opens up all the possibilities of this craft – and becomes a tool for appraising, through the relationship between Dior and the Chanakya ateliers and the Chanakya School of Craft, the multiple landscapes of India: this cartography mixes and spotlights the various techniques which, via the School’s work processes, become the realm of a woman’s legacy and an instrument at once of inventiveness and empowerment.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Dior
Geometric shapes framed in gold silver sequins and strass; bewitching decorative motifs come forth in this kaleidoscope of colors on the silk of pajamas, blouses, and dresses. The revisited toile de Jouy stands out in a vaporous palette of green, much like a camouflage magnified by elements of Indian landscapes populated by talismanic animals dear to this plural civilization.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Dior
The collection, presented in Mumbai, is the expression of a shared territory thanks to this project, which fully celebrates the collaboration between Dior and Chanakya. This creative dialogue perpetuates precious illustrations of exceptional savoir-faire, confirming the unfailing bond between France and India.