In the beginning was the lobster. Interview to Thom Browne
Thom Browne is that unique animal, a designer who invented a unique articulation of American prep and its irreverent tailoring tradition then used this voice
“Ha!,” says Browne down the Zoom: “You know, as you’ve said that I’ve been thinking that I hadn’t realised quite how much I’ve referenced animals in my collections. But you’re right. And even on the more commercial I will discuss with my design team which animal we want to use as the icon for each season.”
Thom Browne holding his dachshund, Hector (@hectorbrowne) photographed in Chelsea, New York.
© AARON VASQUEZ.
Winter 2020/21’s unification of womens and mens into a single show, held in Paris just days before the coronavirus pandemic took hold, proved both his most animal-populated and prescient yet. Models wearing fetching animal masks by Stephen Jones walked two-by-two, a reference both to the degendering of Browne’s presentation and of course Noah’s Ark. As we all sought refuge in the months afterwards Browne released his “Animal Icons” collection of unisex handbags crafted in pebble grain leather to resemble a whole ecosystem of animal life, from frogs to elephants. “It’s never something we’ve done for commercial reasons,” says Browne: “it’s always been to add humour, fantasy and fun.” The first-ever Hector bag, he added: “was initially something we made almost as a joke. But we’ve since sold more Hector bags than we have some other types of bag. And in a way that’s an example of where I think all good design comes from – it starts in a pure and authentic place. And that’s where the animals come in. There’s a real purity to them, and I love them.”
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Opening picture: the Rabbit bag from the Animal Icons series including lions, giraffes, elephants, hippos, dogs.