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Proof That Pierpaolo Piccioli Is Already Fluent in Balenciaga-isms

A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose. Susan Murray wears Cristóbal Balenciaga’s black crepe dinner dress with black gazar rose headdress. Photographed by Irving Penn, Vogue, September 15, 1967

The fashion industry is united in acknowledging Cristóbal Balenciaga as a designer like no other. His technical prowess resulted in designs that became ever more flawless as time went on. Writing in 1967, the year the Spanish couturier retired, UPI reporter Aline Mosby put it this way: “The clothes of Balenciaga…looked like an ironing board headed into the wind. It was that smooth look, every seam a masterpiece, the flat surfaces with hardly a dent to show even the bosom, the faultless construction, the hunched-over curve, that made Balenciaga—without question—the world’s greatest living creator of women’s clothing.”

Pierpaolo Piccioli will be the fifth designer to pick up the great man’s mantle, following Michel Goma, Nicolas Ghesquière, Alexander Wang, and Demna. The pairings below, which place the Italian designer’s work next to that of Balenciaga, suggest he is well suited for the job. His joy in color is grounded in designs that have rigor.

Valentino, spring 2018 couture Photo: Marcus Tondo / Indigital.tv
Gift wrapped: Stella Oakes in Cristóbal Balenciaga’s white satin gown with a red taffeta bow Photographed by Cecil Beaton

In a conversation earlier today, Piccioli recalled that the very first image he posted on Instagram was Balenciaga’s famous wedding dress of 1967, a bias-cut oval of gazar and coal-scuttle hat that is a study in simple elegance and the manifestation of the couturier’s belief that “elegance is elimination.” Piccioli saw this marvel, which he describes as a “masterpiece of the history of fashion,” on display in the Costume Institute’s “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination” exhibition at The Met. Balenciaga, he said, is “probably one of the first minimalists, and that dress, to me, is a manifesto of what Brancusi was saying: Simplicity is complexity resolved, which is also my manifesto when I work. So I resaw this post, and even if I’m not a fan of predestination, I felt there was something. Sometimes we have to go where, unaware, we are going already.” It certainly feels like Piccioli is embarking on a golden off-to-meet-the-Wizard moment.

More than minimal: Cristóbal Balenciaga’s silk gazar wedding ensemble Photographed by David Bailey, Vogue, July 1, 1967
Moncler x Pierpaolo Piccioli, fall 2018 ready-to-wear Photo: Courtesy of Moncler 1 Pierpaolo Piccioli
Valentino, fall 2018 couture Photo: Yannis Vlamos / Indigital.tv
From Cristóbal Balenciaga: “Evening white swept with red.” White satin dress and red velvet stole. Photographed by Frances McLaughlin-Gill, Vogue, November 1, 1952
Goya-inspired dresses by Cristóbal Balenciaga Artwork by Carl Erickson, Vogue, July 1, 1939
Valentino, spring 2022 couture Photo: Courtesy of Valentino
Valentino, fall 2023 couture Photo: Courtesy of Valentino
A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose. Susan Murray wears Cristóbal Balenciaga’s black crepe dinner dress with black gazar rose headdress. Photographed by Irving Penn, Vogue, September 15, 1967
Diana Vreeland with Cristóbal Balenciaga’s famous one-seam coat, 1973 Bettmann
Valentino, fall 2021 ready-to-wear Photo: Salvatore Dragone / Gorunway.com
Valentino, spring 2024 couture Photo: Courtesy of Valentino
B is for bolero and balloon and Balenciaga. Photographed by John Rawlings, Vogue, November 15, 1946
Nineteenth-century-inspired looks by Cristóbal Balenciaga, left, and Bruyère Artwork by Carl Erickson, Vogue, October 1, 1939
Moncler x Pierpaolo Piccioli, fall 2019 ready-to-wear Photo: Courtesy of Moncler
Valentino, spring 2023 couture Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com
Cristóbal Balenciaga stripes it rich, 1955. Photo: Intercontinetale / AFP via Getty Images
Belle feather: Cristóbal Balenciaga’s marabou-trimmed sheath, 1957 Photo: Keystone-France / Getty Images
Valentino, fall 2021 ready-to-wear Photo: Salvatore Dragone / Gorunway.com
Balenciaga by Demna, fall 2021 couture Photo: Courtesy of Balenciaga
She’s the tops: A model wears Cristóbal Balenciaga’s feathered hat. Photographed by Clifford Coffin, Vogue, April 1, 1948
Valentino, fall 2021 couture Photo: Filippo Fior / Gorunway.com

This article was originally published on Vogue.com.

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