Yesterday,
I hung out for a good portion of the day at Comme des Garcons, talking
to folks. Despite the impression of surprise and playfulness left by
the Comme des Garcons shops, which are designed by Rei Kawakubo and
Toshiaki Oshiba (a collaboration that goes back more than 30 years),
the headquarters are a no-frills, no-nonsense workspace: cutting
tables, mannequins, offices, what you might expect. Tao Kurihara is
warm, thoughtful, slightly impish and easy to talk to. She is no
pushover, I felt. Tao giggled with something like alarm when I casually
asked what she?s planning for her fall show. Such information is a
secret at Comme des Garcons; nobody knows what the different studios
are working on until their respective shows, in Paris, and everybody at
CdG respects that.




I loved my chat with Junya Watanabe. Junya is someone with a strong
sense of character?that?s evident when you talk to him?and a good sense
of humor. Of course, as many people in the fashion world know, Junya is
also a man of few words. You have to tug and persist and avoid
questions that can be answered with a yes or a no, though he will
frequently answer that way. We had a productive conversation about
Comme des Garcons and other matters and then as we were winding up,
Junya smiled and said, ?Can I ask you a question??




?Fire away,? I said.




Junya wanted to know, in essence, how a critic views a designer?s
clothes?not just his but any designer?s clothes. He asked if I was
guided by personal taste, and I said no or rarely. I explained that I
looked at each designer differently, based on their objectives and
audience. I told him I consider their work over the long term; after
all, great designers sometimes have bad shows. I told him that I
consider what else might be going on in a house to influence a
designer?s choices that season?commercial pressures, for instance. I
think that?s reasonable and fair. After all, one of the problems that
we all face in life is a lack of information?sometimes we might make a
better decision if we just had a little more information. That?s just
as true for fashion collections as it is for relationships. I mentioned
the blog and I said that there is clearly a preference to discuss the
fashion leaders?the real designers?and not the celebrity hunters, etc.
Junya seemed surprised that I held different designers to different
standards.




Shouldn?t you treat them all the same, he asked.




I said, no, not at all, pointing that Junya holds himself to a
pretty high creative standard. Not every designer struggles to come up
with something new and technically innovative.




He was so talkative. It was fun. Then he asked me if I thought creativity was important in fashion.




Maybe Junya felt that the world cared less and less for creative
design, maybe he was working on something particular in his studio and
didn?t yet have the answer. I don?t know. I just told him what I
thought. I said, ?I think it?s the most important thing of all.? He
drew his head back and a smile rapidly appeared on his face. I said I?d
see him in Paris.