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Alessandro Michele's 'Twinsburg' exploration for Gucci at Milan Fashion Week

For Gucci’s spring-summer 2022-23 collection, the creative director staged side-by-side shows inside the Gucci Hub, showcasing twins in identical looks in synchronic stride.

Alessandro Michele's 'Twinsburg' exploration for Gucci at Milan Fashion Week

Gucci spring-summer 2023 at Milan Fashion Week. (Photo: Gucci)

Gucci's creative director Alessandro Michele constructed a true parallel universe on the Milan runway with a surprise theatrical reveal.

For his Spring-Summer 2022-23 collection dubbed Twinsburg, Michele staged side-by-side shows inside the Gucci Hub, each unbeknownst to the other, until a wall lifted, revealing twins in identical looks in synchronic stride.

For the final walkthrough, the 68 sets of twins met in the center, grasping hands and reuniting for the final walkthrough.

The reveal was so powerful, so unexpected, that normally jaded fashionistas could be heard confessing after that they had been brought to tears.

"I was crying too. I don't really know why,'' Michele said backstage. "I don't cry often but maybe it was appropriate at the end for me to cry because it was very intense."

"I think it is much more complex doing this job now. There are times when I ask myself, why am I doing this? Somebody is talking about nuclear war. Politics is a catastrophe. The situation on the planet is a disaster,'' Michele added. "But as human beings the only weapon we have is to imagine something else, and to make it happen.''

Gucci spring-summer 2023 at Milan Fashion Week. (Photo: Gucci)

Michele said that the show was an exploration of our own inner selves, and the reveal that we harbour sort of inner-twin, who might hold us back or spur us on.

His idea of ''the other'' was shaped by an unusual family arrangement growing up believing he had two mothers: His own genetic mother and her twin sister. He called both ''mamma,'' as they raised their families neighbouring apartments because they couldn't bear to be apart. He said he only started to understand the difference at age seven, when his aunt died.

"I had two mums, because we all lived together, so I really appreciated what taking care of the other means,'' he said.

Michele said presenting his collection in duplicate gave more power to the garments, each of which was styled to the eclectic standard that Michele has set to great global success.

They included a suit with trousers that appeared to be held together by garters, revealing the upper thigh, a part of the male physic rarely seen in formal dressing. Quilted floral jackets and trousers were a genderless affair. A gorgeous silken embroidered robe was pleated in the back with a trailing train. Looks were accessorised with new face jewelry with metallic fringe, also seen on sunglasses.

The notion of an evil twin was represented on the runway by motifs from the 1980s movie Gremlins, in which the creatures transform to become naughty. Appearing as stuffed accessories, patches and prints, the Gremlins were meant to underline "the fear of your evil-self,'' Michele said.

Michele emblazoned the word "Fuori!!!" on some garments in an homage to an Italian gay rights organisation that was founded in 1971. Michele has spoken in the past about Italy's failure to pass landmark legislation that would criminalise hate crimes against gays, women and the disabled, and he indicated concern over forecasts that a far-right party is forecast to dominate Italy's parliamentary elections on Sunday (Sep 18).

"The elections clearly show that freedoms are being eroded little by little,'' he said. "There was a time when we were achieving a lot. It is very complicated."

Source: AP/yy

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