Paris Fashion Week: Dior pays homage to ballet icon Nureyev

A model presents a creation by designer Kim Jones as part of his Menswear ready-to-wear Fall-Winter 2024/2025 collection show for fashion house Dior Homme during Men's Fashion Week in Paris, France, 19 January, 2024.
Reuters

Dior paid homage to ballet legend Rudolf Nureyev on Friday, with a menswear collection inspired by stage costumes and presented on an elaborate moving set.

Designer Kim Jones told AFP he was influenced by "the spirit of performance" to create stage-wear that could create "an extravaganza at home".

Models present creations by designer Kim Jones as part of his Menswear ready-to-wear Fall-Winter 2024/2025 collection show for fashion house Dior Homme during Men's Fashion Week in Paris, France, 19 January, 2024.
Reuters

To the stirring brass and strings of Sergei Prokofiev's "Romeo and Juliet", the models emerged in a steel-grey stage that ultimately rose into spinning platforms like a giant music box.

Jones said he was paying tribute to his uncle Colin Jones, a classical dancer and photojournalist who produced a rare intimate series of photos of Nureyev.

Models present creations by designer Kim Jones as part of his Menswear ready-to-wear Fall-Winter 2024/2025 collection show for fashion house Dior Homme during Men's Fashion Week in Paris, France, 19 January, 2024.
Reuters

The Soviet dancer who defected to the West in the 1960s and was arguably the most famous classical dancer of his generation up to his death in 1993.

"With the history of Dior and the ballet, they were a path, a source," the British designer told AFP before the show.

The sober collection included some nods to Nureyev's costumes and personal style in some of the baggy trousers and turbans.

Models present creations by designer Kim Jones as part of his Menswear ready-to-wear Fall-Winter 2024/2025 collection show for fashion house Dior Homme during Men's Fashion Week in Paris, France, 19 January, 2024.
Reuters

There were also more dazzling outfits, with sequins and bare-skin tops, with other styles saw boyish long socks and shorts over bare knees.

Elaborate kimonos mixed with Jones's signature suits, with wrap closures and double breasting, and a lot of brown. Jones said he imagined "a meeting of utility and splendour that is both functional and poetic."

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