These are clothes designed to empower and also recede behind the wearer in their crisp correctness, to ensure her image wont be cluttered by any competing message from a fashion designer.
And this is the kind of clothing Max Mara makes. You will never see a Max Mara collection thats in conversation with whats happening at Gucci, Prada, or other luxury brands that inspire biannual changes in sleeves, hem lengths, and color palettes. You wont spot the Max Mara logo anywhere but the tag of a garment. The brand does not build a world and invite you to participate in its fantasies; it sees the world that its woman”well-off, well-heeled, and well-positioned”lives in and designs for her reality.
Max Maras clothes imbue their wearer with a feeling of security, of confidence in her own power, a magic trick most directly associated with those aforementioned coats. Long a fashion-
insider status symbol, the wool and cashmere ones, in resolutely simple wrap shapes or sumptuous double-breasted cuts, are often compared to the Hermès Kelly bag or the Burberry trench coat because of how they serve as an emblem for the brand. Still, like the rest of Max Maras clothes, they are discreet, a kind of anonymous armor.
Max Mara has long been considered appropriate clothing for occasions that demand a bit of gravitas” like Jolies United Nations visits, or Markles royal appearances, or Pelosis showdown with Trump. But increasingly, its steadfast commitment to understatement, to putting the woman before the clothes, feels like something singular, even radical. In a fashion world dominated by sputtering trends and dizzying change, women find something respectful in Max Maras philosophy. While most brands strive to froth their customers up to buy their latest It bag or dress every six months, Max Mara has instead focused on subtle variations on classic wardrobe pieces with a commitment to quality. It isnt necessary to buy a new coat every season because the design and the fabrication hold up; the coat will live in your closet for decades.
Also unchanged: Max Maras emphasis on the brand over its designer. The British-born Griffiths arrived at Max Mara in 1987, as a recent fashion graduate and passionate club kid, and worked his way up to the role of creative director. But its only in the past decade that he has even spoken on behalf of the brand. This is no Martin Margiela circus act, in which Griffiths is playing coy to cultivate mystery. He simply understands that his job is to emphasize the customer”the woman”rather than himself.
When we meet in June in a Lisbon hotel suite thats serving as the brands press war room, just before the 2023 Resort show, Griffiths tells me he keeps a pinboard in his office back in Italy with images of people who perennially inspire Max Maras collections: Marilyn Monroe, Dorothy Parker, Grace Jones. And David Bowie. Yes, the unofficial muse of a brand known for unchanging classics is Mr. Ch-ch-ch-changes himself. David Bowie deserves his place on that board for what he did in opening peoples minds and for being able to constantly reinvent himself but stay true to who he was, Griffiths says.
Thats how Griffiths tries to approach designing for Max Mara; fashion requires constant newness, but there is something solid and unchanging at the core. Its this sense of reinvention, but theres this true essence to every Bowie album, he explains. Each Bowie album still sounds like Bowie. He never changed his message, [though] he muddled and clouded and distorted it, and he pushed it.
The three-day resort show, a suave affair, was staged within the gardens among the pools of the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, one of Lisbons marquee arts institutions. Mention Lisbon, Griffiths noticed, and people would say, Oh! Ive always wanted to go there. Its become a magnet for young Europeans relocating from more expensive cities and a hub of contemporary culture and design. On a research trip, he discovered Natlia Correia, a leftist writer who lit up Lisbons society and intelligentsia throughout the 1960s and 70s with her salons, which drew intellectuals like Graham Greene and Eugne Ionesco. (There was also the matter that she more than dabbled in erotic poetry, as Griffiths puts it, which is a pursuit that got her a prison sentence.)
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