From a new chapter at Gucci to stripping things back at JW Anderson, the best of Milan Fashion Week Men’s A/W 2023, as it happens
The menswear season continues with Milan Fashion Week Mens A/W 2023, heralding an eclectic schedule which spans both the city’s stalwarts – Prada, Giorgio Armani, Fendi among them – and a small but energetic contingent of young designers providing a fresh take on Italian style. The week opens with the introduction of a fresh chapter at Gucci, following the departure of creative director Alessandro Michele last November, continuing across the weekend with JW Anderson’s sophomore Milanese outing, Marco de Vincenzo’s debut menswear collection for Etro, and an array of presentations and events taking place across the city.
Here is the best of Milan Fashion Week Men’s A/W 2023, as it happens.
The best of Milan Fashion Week Men’s A/W 2023
Zegna
Alessandro Sartori looked towards the roots of Zegna with a collection titled ‘The Oasi of Cashmere’ in reference to both the Oasi Zegna nature park in Piedmont, Italy, where the brand’s first wool mill was opened in the early 20th century, and Oasi Cashmere, a fully traceable line of cashmere products which signal the company’s wider sustainability goals (each comes with a QR code to see the garment’s entire journey from natural fibre to finished product). ‘At Zegna I have the unprecedented opportunity to create fabrics from weaving through to finishing, challenging our manufacturers, pushing them to explore uncharted waters,’ he said, noting the collection was a celebration of Zegna’s unparalleled Italian craftsmanship. ‘[It] allows me to mould our silhouettes right from the matter, making sure that our commitment to innovation and excellence is rooted in every step of the process. The result is an all-encompassing language that is truly progressive.’ The collection itself was one of ‘soft precision’, exploring the idea of leaving space between body and garment – here figured in the gently oversized silhouette of minimal blazers, blousons, or cocooning sweaters with intricate bouclé or frisé jacquard textures.
Giorgio Armani
Accompanied by a soaring soundtrack composed by Italian pianist Ludovico Einaudi, Giorgio Armani’s latest collection – shown at the house’s headquarters – drew inspiration from traditional Milanese architecture. In particular, the atriums and courtyards of the city’s palazzos – ‘atriums that hide gardens, spaces designed with discreet geometry in white and coloured marble’. As such, the colour and texture of marble was echoed in a rich array of fabrications – cashmere, alpaca, velvet and silk among them – many of which featured designs evocative of zig-zagging floor or wall tiles. Diaphanous silhouettes and softly structured tailoring in rock-like shades of grey and beige, meanwhile, recalled Milanese statuary. ‘A nod to the age of elegance, that, while partially forgotten, echoes in the elegant spirit of this city,’ said the house.
JW Anderson
Jonathan Anderson’s sophomore show in Milan – having shifted his menswear to the city this past June – began with an underwear-clad model carrying a roll of fabric. ‘Clothing stripped down to where it all starts,’ read the collection notes, which spoke of Anderson’s desire to return to a ‘blank slate’, ‘reducing, compressing, and condensing, with a certain crudeness and definite blankness’. It lent the collection a visual starkness; in several of the looks models would wear just a single garment, like a fuzzy sweater or a pair of pants, and nothing else (‘no fuss, no extra, no more… everything is what it is, and that’s it’). ‘I think we’re going to head into a season of reduction and stripping things back,’ the designer noted backstage, an observation which was echoed by Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons who had a similarly reductionist approach to their Prada menswear show earlier in the day. As such, several of the garments worked from archetypes: a duffle coat (here fastened with BDSM-like buckles), a trench (left raw at the edges), or a pair of shorts (frilled at the hem, reminiscent of those shown in his breakout A/W 2013 collection). If it was a diversion from the surrealism of his recent collections, moments of satisfying strangeness remained, whether a single pillow held to the chest or the frog-shaped footwear, created in collaboration with children’s shoe producer Wellipets. Anderson noted that he had wanted to work with them for several seasons; prior to the show they appeared in a number of teaser images on the designer’s Instagram. ‘There’s something about them that reminds me of my childhood, they were such a thing to have,’ he said. ‘It’s the only surreal moment in the collection; they’re almost like a cassette player – an icon of design.’
Etro
Rolls of the colourful patterned fabrics synonymous with Etro were stacked around the runway for Marco de Vincenzo’s debut menswear show for the house, noting that the collection began with his own cherished memories of fabric – like a jacquard velvet blanket he loved as a child. ‘The Etro house and Marco’s household overlap and mingle, and a broad sense of domesticity comes through,’ said the collection notes. As such, there was a feeling of the homespun to the collection – crotchet fruits on fuzzy jumpers, blouson-style jackets cut from upholstery fabrics, and pieces made from soft teddy – while colourful patterned linings spoke of private pleasures. ‘The idea of merging the public and the private, the homely and the social,’ De Vincenzo said of the collection, which marked a charming start to the Italian designer’s menswear tenure at the house.
Prada
In recent seasons, Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons have been drawn to simplicity, looking back to the ‘fundamentals of fashion’, stripping garments of complication and translating archetypal forms for the realities of living today. Those explorations continued this season with a collection titled ‘Let’s Talk About Clothes’, which sought to oppose a feeling of ‘reduction and simplicity’ with moments of softness – ‘comfort, exaggeration and intimacy’.
This juxtaposition was reflected in the Fondazione Prada’s Deposito show space, which was transformed into a low-ceilinged, bunker-like space, the only marks of decoration being hazard-orange columns that ran up the outer walls. As the show began – opening with a stream of minimal, single-breasted tailoring from which colourful pointed collars emerged – the ceiling slowly rose, revealing vast art deco chandeliers at full height. It seemed to speak of an opposition between minimalism and decoration, but also volume – how one shape can become another, ‘that proportion can transform perception’, as the notes described.
As such, the narrow tailoring gave way to more expansive silhouettes, their forms signifying protection and comfort – whether an optic white protective vest, a bulbous take on the bomber jacket (stripped of ornamentation and hardware), or a padded top evocative of the cushions which the house sent as invitations. Miuccia Prada said these pieces were a response to the realities of living today: ‘It is a complicated moment in the world – and we react to it,’ she said. ‘The most honest thing we can do is to create something useful for people today – to face reality in, and frame the idea of our reality through clothes. We want to create fashion with a significance and a meaning – that is the value of fashion today.’
Simons added that this collection was also about the ‘DNA of Prada… clothes embedded with fragments of an identity we can recognise as fundamentally Prada.’ Indeed, those familiar with the house’s archive could pick out traces of previous collections from the house in its details – making something of a return to Prada’s foundations. ‘These are unmistakable and significant gestures,’ Simons continued, ‘towards the heritage and history of the brand, and to the meaning of Prada now.’
Fendi
An enormous helter-skelter hovered over the Fendi show space; as the show began, metallic Fendi-branded orbs rolled their way along its course, gliding over the audience’s heads. The Italian house said it was designed to evoke pinball machines found in roller discos, a mood reflected in the collection’s Studio 54-tinged sensibility – pieces were imbued with a languid glamour which Fendi called ‘subverted classicism’ – and the shimmering soundtrack by legendary Italian producer Giorgio Moroder, which crescendoed with Donna Summer’s I Feel Love over the finale. ‘Expressions of shimmer and shine’ added to the collection’s after-dark mood, from scatterings of sequins to delicate metallic appliqué en tremblant, while shawl-like elements across tailoring and outerwear cocooned the body in glamorous style.
Dolce & Gabbana
Stefano Gabbana and Domenico Dolce’s latest collection was a swerve away from the maximalism of recent menswear seasons with a rigorous – and impeccably tailored – collection in shades of black, grey and white. Much like their womenswear collection shown this past September (see highlights of Milan Fashion Week S/S 2023), the designers expressed a desire to get back to the house’s codes, Dolce & Gabbana’s ‘essence’ – here arriving in sensual tailoring, much of it double-breasted and lightly cinched at the waist, corsetry-inspired cummerbunds, and moments of sheerness and exposure in a celebration of the body. Despite the clarity of the silhouette, flourishes of glamour and embellishment remained, from delicate beaded and crystal flowers to swathes of sequins – a demonstration of Dolce & Gabbana’s feats of Italian construction and craft.
Emporio Armani
Giorgio Armani titled his latest Emporio Armani show ‘A View From Above’, the newly in-the-round show space at the Armani Teatro decorated with a map of Milan which stretched across the floor. Befitting the scene, the opening looks recalled vintage 1930s aviation wear – leather pilot hats, goggle-like sunglasses, flight jackets, heavy boots – as if the models were circling the city from the air (via the collection notes, the designer said that ‘flight, represented by the eagle, is part of the Emporio Armani spirit: a sense of adventure and boundless taste for exploration’). Elsewhere in the expansive collection, a focus on contemporary tailoring – the closing gamut of eveningwear looks in black, some shimmering with sequins, were a masterful showcase Mr Armani’s fluidity of cut – while sportswear inspirations remained central in crisp quilted bombers, voluminous technical trousers and enveloping EA7 parkas.
MSGM
The invitation for Massimo Giorgetti’s A/W 2023 menswear collection for MSGM was the enrolment letter for an architectural degree at the fancifully named ‘Dreamers University, School of Art, Fashion, Music and Happiness’. Taking place in the Brutalist concrete basement of real-life university Politecnico di Milano, Giorgetti looked towards the dress codes of American campus style – he noted inspiration from 1989 movie Dead Poets Society, set in a Vermont prep school – melding collegiate motifs (‘Cheer’ emblazoned sweaters, baseball-style cardigans, hoodies and varsity jackets) with preppy tailoring, shrunken sweater vests and ties set askew. An element of teenage rebellion came in black berets – historically associated with student protest movements – and a blaring soundtrack by 1980s Italian punk band CCCP, known for its anti-establishment stance.
DSquared2
Dean and Dan Caten said that they were ‘looking back to look forward’ with an unapologetic A/W 2023 collection which found its nexus in their first-ever runway show which took place in 2003. In it, Naomi Campbell – brandishing two shopping bags – memorably sprinted towards the steps of a grounded Boeing jet (in heels), before turning and striding down the runway. It has since become one of fashion’s most re-shared clips, an example of the Caten brothers’ brand of joyfully unrestrained camp.
Yesterday evening’s show began in a teenage boy’s bedroom – complete with rumpled bed sheets and walls tacked with posters – for an exploration of the rebellious dress codes of youthful archetypes: ‘the geek, the jock, the goth, the emo and the femme’. ‘The freedom to be who you want to be,’ said the twins of remaking these stereotypes, playfully amalgamating distinct elements of Y2K dress – trucker caps, low-slung torn jeans, tops sliced away to reveal the naval – with irreverent slogans, ‘Choke’, ‘24-7 Star’, ‘Recycled Teenager’, and ‘Livin’ Doll’ emblazoned throughout. Models, including an array of TikTok stars and social-media personalities, walked the runway with Campbell-inspired panache – ‘full Dsquared2 energy’, as the notes described.
1017 Alyx 9SM
Matthew M Williams looked towards American artist Mark Flood – known for punk-inspired pastiches of American culture and the contemporary art world – for his A/W 2023 1017 Alyx 9SM collection, with a retrospective of Flood’s work at Milan’s Spazio Maiocchi gallery providing the show’s backdrop. Flood’s slogans and works also appeared throughout the collection in a series of collaborative pieces – some motifs were created for the show, others existing – which added a visual richness to Williams‘ severe brand of minimalism. The influence of technical sportswear remained strong, with Alyx-emblazoned running gear worn over jeans or tailored trousers, while a streak of rebellion came in flourishes of studs and thorn-like spikes, appearing on the knee of a leather trouser, on the toe of a boot, or around the neckline of an otherwise unembellished floor-length halter dress.
Gucci
Anticipation was high for Gucci’s A/W 2023 collection, which marked the first since the departure of creative director Alessandro Michele in November 2022. Presented in the round – in the centre, American noise-rock trio Marc Ribot’s Ceramic Dog provided the live soundtrack – the house said the collection centred on the idea of ‘improvisation as methodology’, an apt metaphor for an in-house team, sans creative leadership, attempting to define a new chapter of the historic house in mere months. Initially, the collection felt something of a return to Michele’s earliest collections at the house – hinted by the reappearance of the fur-lined backless loafer, one of the designer’s first cult pieces – with languid tailoring, oversized overcoats, and romantic oversized silk shirts, delicately ruffled at the collar and cuffs. As the collection went on, these ideas evolved in new directions – a nod, the house said, to the ‘multi-faceted creatives and craftsmen that make up the house of Gucci’ – which spanned nods to Tom Ford’s Gucci tenure (denim jeans tied with stacks of silk scarfs, T-shirts slashed to the naval, crystal-studded denim) to colourful oversized boiler suits and Motocross pants, to dancewear-inspired leg warms, ribbed-knit trousers and wide boat-neck sweaters. The suggestion was a more discreet vision of luxury for the house, though what comes next is anybody’s guess – Michele, of course, was picked from the in-house team. Perhaps the next creative director of house is already waiting in the wings.