Paris Fashion Week: Dior’s women rule the world – which pleases ‘feminist’ Sigourney Weaver

Less is more at Schiaparelli, while Comme des Garçons is accused of racial appropriation and Iris Van Herpen delves into her exquisite visual poetry
Female empowerment, controversies about race, and designs that plunged to the depths of the seas then climbed Mount Olympus were among themes to grace Paris Couture Week on its drama-filled first day.
Here are some highlights of Monday’s spring/summer 2020 couture shows.
Dior: Women rule (and glimmer)

Dior’s first ever female designer, Maria Grazia Chiuri, is onto something.
Her feminist logo-emblazoned T-shirts have been among the house’s biggest sellers – so she went back on the girl power charge to capitalise on this popular unique selling point in the Rodin Museum collection.
The starting idea was a question posed by the artist and set-designer Judy Chicago, blown up as text at the show: “What if Women Ruled the World?”

Chiuri answered it herself by basing the shimmering Greco-Roman designs around the theme of “The Female Divine”.
Though at several points Chiuri strayed into heavy-handedness, the overall result was an archetypally couture collection that harked back to the couture origins of draping and strapping.
Athena, the ancient warrior-goddess, was evoked in a tightly-strapped gold bodice and sections of gold fringing.