Ukrainian designer debuts
CULVER CITY, Calif. — Where was Paco Rabanne when Ukrainian designer Veronika Jeanvie needed him at her U.S. debut?
Rabanne, whose experimental plastic and metal dresses in the '60s launched his decades-long career, was noticeably absent at Jeanvie's headlining show at Mercedes-Benz L.A. Fashion Week recently "because of a family emergency," said publicist Alexandre Boulais. She did not elaborate.
Matt Sayles/AP
Ukrainian designer Veronika Jeanvie backstage before her fall 2008 show during Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in Culver City, Calif., earlier this month.
That unfortunately left the event, billed as "Veronika Jeanvie consulted by Mr. Paco Rabanne," without its iconic Spanish-French anchor, and cast the spotlight squarely on 28-year-old Jeanvie and her bright, bling-heavy and, at times, gaudy designs.
Top that off with the pressure of Jeanvie being the first Ukrainian designer to present a collection in the United States, according to the show's publicists. Vogue editor at-large Andre Leon Talley, designer Eduardo Lucero and musician Kelis all sat in the audience.
"It's normal to be nervous, but today is going to be OK," Jeanvie told The Associated Press backstage at Culver City's Smashbox Studios, her fast Russian translated through an interpreter.
Her inspiration was the ocean, sky and green plants she saw while on vacation in England and France, she said.
She also was influenced by Rabanne's dresses made out of round metal discs, which created a buzz in 1966.
"I use both metal and soft materials like silk, a contrast showing that women are strong and soft at the same time," Jeanvie said.
With rock tunes blaring overhead, models strutted down the runway in towering heels and clad in an array of shiny fabrics, from silver and gold hot pants to a skintight gold bodysuit paired with a sort of chain-mail poncho.
Rabanne's influence was obvious, from the blankets of linked silver hoops draped over simple shifts to a jingling, jiggling chain-mail bikini and a white skirt that seemed to be fashioned out of a towel, albeit lined with silver.
But while Rabanne's fashion experiments — from paper dresses to sexy, futuristic costumes for Jane Fonda in 1968's "Barbarella" — were explosively innovative 40 years ago, Jeanvie's designs seemed overwrought.
Jeanvie fared best when she toned down the costume-y look.
A turquoise blue strapless cocktail dress filled out nicely with a voluminous skirt accented with white. Spangly diamond shapes patterned a shift with a shell top, something Kelis could pull off.
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