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Milan Fashion Week 2023: Giorgio Armani’s muted hues contrasted with Indian newcomer Dhruv Kapoor’s mishmash of colours – but both menswear shows closed on a tranquil note

Models present creations from the autumn/winter 2023-2024 collection of Italian designer Giorgio Armani for the Italian label Emporio Armani during a show at the Milan Fashion Week, in Milan, Italy, on January 16. Photo: EPA-EFE
Milan Fashion Week closed four days of mostly menswear previews for next autumn and winter on a note of tranquillity.
Italian fashion world stalwart Giorgio Armani took his admirers inside Milan’s hidden courtyards, islands of calm concealed from general view within the walls of the city’s austere neoclassical architecture.

Indian designer Dhruv Kapoor, a relative Milan newcomer, hopes to promote an interior journey with a new collection in which he seeks to reconcile alter-egos – be they romantic, aggressive or pensive – as a way of healing.

While creating similar moods, the presented designs couldn’t have been more aesthetically opposite: Armani’s is a study in tailoring and muted hues and Kapoor’s is an explosion of colours on silhouettes that mix the oversized with the petite.

Here are the highlights from January 16, Monday’s shows …

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Dhruv Kapoor promotes healing

A model wears a creation as part of the Dhruv Kapoor menswear autumn/winter 2023-24 collection presented in Milan, Italy, on January 16. Photo: AP

Kapoor has a message of radical self-acceptance in his collection, which combined floral prints promoting stillness, cartoon images of Godzilla representing aggression and lace details for romanticism.

The designer, through his unisex collection dubbed “The Embracer”, advocates embracing all of our parts, even those viewed negatively. Not that he thinks the solution lies in wardrobing.

Indian designer Dhruv Kapoor’s latest collection sends a message of loving oneself. Photo: AP

“It’s a very simple process. Look in the mirror and tell yourself, ‘I love you.’ And see how the magic starts to shift. You just need to admire yourself just the way you are,” Kapoor said backstage, adding that he has felt a dramatic shift since adopting the practice. “I don’t know how it comes. I never dwell on the how.”

Dhruv Kapoor’s unisex collection, dubbed “The Embracer”, seeks to reconcile alter egos and promote healing. Photo: AP

The collection includes a fitted, ripped denim dress over loose jeans. Broad-shoulder suit jackets were combined with tight trousers that flare into a bell bottom. Oversized sweatshirts were layered with cotton tunics and a sheer lace pant. Godzilla raged on the front of a button-down shirt or tightfitting dress, while a silver pillow jacket had reptilian spikes down the back.

Dhruv Kapoor’s new collection features silhouettes that mix the oversized with the petite. Photo: AP

“Godzilla also has a very negative, monstrous thing attached to it,” Kapoor said. But that should not impede acceptance, he insisted.

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Crystals on knitwear, suits and jackets hold energy that Kapoor said can be activated to have a positive impact on the wearer’s life. Instructions are included with the garments.

A different kind of ready-to-wear: Dhruv Kapoor’s latest collection presents crystals on knitwear, with instructions on how to activate the energy within. Photo: AP

Models traversed the Tiepolo room in the 18th century Clerici Palace beneath images that included demons, walking to the beat of modems connecting, mixed with classical music and hip-hop. The mash-up gives “us a whiff of the past and the future,” Kapoor said. “And we are birthing a new present.”

Dhruv Kapoor used upcycled and leftover textiles to create many of his pieces this season. Photo: AP

Kapoor also promotes healing for the environment. Nearly two-thirds of his collection is either upcycled, employing leftover textiles that otherwise would be discarded, or recycled. For this season, all of his suit fabrics are made from recycled plastics.

Armani’s hidden Milan

Models present a creation of Giorgio Armani during the autumn/winter 2023-2024 Men’s fashion show as part of the Milan Fashion Week, on January 16. Photo: AFP

Hidden from view in Italy’s frenetic fashion and finance capital are quiet gardens ensconced in Milan’s courtyards.

Giorgio Armani suggests these are places to pause and take stock before emerging for business or play – this season on soft footwear with rubber soles.

Italian designer Giorgio Armani focuses on tailoring and muted hues for his latest collection. Photo: AFP

Models walked slowly to a soundtrack of Italian pianist-composer Ludovico Einaudi while wearing suits and separates that were deeply textured, projecting self-assuredness in the 88-year-old designer’s trademark soft-silhouette.

Armani’s latest menswear show featured Italian pianist-composer Ludovico Einaudi’s music. Photo: EPA-EFE

The colour palette consisted of soft earthy tones set off by olive and forest green, with a surge of crimson in sportswear and a final smattering of weekend dandy looks. Flannel cargo pants were paired with soft jumpers. Disciplined double-breasted suits befitted a negotiating table. Big fake furs, including one in tiger print, lightened the quiet mood.

Armani’s show seems to exude a certain confidence that comes from maturity, like this flannel cargo pants paired with soft jumpers look. Photo: EPA-EFE

The show closed with couples dressed in shimmering black evening dresses and formal suits with silk or velvet details chattering down the runway, as if they were leaving a party.

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Giorgio Armani insists that one must wear a suit to important meetings. Photo: AFP

Armani conceded that flashes of skin on other runways this season had a sensuality. But he stuck by his conviction: “You can wear anything you want, but when you are at an important table, you need to wear an important suit,” he said.

His one transgression: ties that arch under the knot, as if pulled loose, and worn tucked into vests, “to give space to relax”.

Giorgio Armani, 88-year-old prolific fashion designer. Photo: AFP

“Stiff is not good,” the designer added.

Milan Fashion Week 2023 ran from January 14-16, 2023.

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  • Both Giorgio Armani and Dhruv Kapoor wrapped up Milan Fashion Week Men’s autumn/winter 2023 with tranquillity – the former held the show inside quiet, hidden courtyards while the latter promoted healing
  • While Kapoor sent a message to embrace all sides of ourselves with his variety of silhouettes and colours, Armani insisted on quality tailoring – but he also said ‘stiff is not good’