Down the left edge of the page, before you reach the clothes, Escada prints a gazetteer. Boston, Great Neck, Palm Beach, Seattle, Bellevue, then a line promising San Francisco and Chestnut Hill for the spring, then four Canadian provinces set underneath: Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta. It is a strange thing to hand a reader in a fashion advertisement, a retail directory, and it sits beside Gail Elliott in a teal blazer over an acid-green skirt like a caption to a whole country.
Read the list as geography and it stops being a directory. These are not mass-market addresses. Great Neck is old Long Island money; Palm Beach is where that money spends the winter; Bellevue and Chestnut Hill are the comfortable edges of Seattle and Boston, the suburbs with the good schools and the better parking. Notice, too, that the United States gets named towns while Canada gets whole provinces. That asymmetry tells you how fresh the northern push was: south of the border Escada could point at a shopfront, north of it the presence was still thin enough to describe by region. The company was not trying to be everywhere in January 1990. It was placing itself, precisely, in the enclaves where a woman might pay for a jacket the colour of a swimming pool and consider it sober.
In January 1990 the house was at full volume and selling. Escada had grown through the eighties into one of the largest fashion firms in the world, and gone public in 1986 while Margaretha and Wolfgang Ley kept fifty-one percent of the voting stock, so it was a listed company still run by the couple who built it. She designed and he ran the money. She had modelled for Jacques Fath and Christian Dior before deciding she would rather make the clothes than wear them, and the house ran on colour loaded until every surface had a job. The first Escada fragrance, named after her, reached American counters that same year. This is a business with every reason to think the new decade would keep rewarding exactly what it already did well.
I look at Gail Elliott and almost nothing about her reads as dated. The bone structure, the level gaze, the wind machine lifting her hair off one shoulder: put that face in a campaign shot from last week and it would pass without comment. Human beauty of this kind is close to time-invariant, or at least it drifts slowly enough that thirty-six years barely register. We recognise it the way we recognise a face across a room, instantly, without having to place the year.
The clothes are another matter, and this is where the page turns uncanny. Everything Elliott is wearing has picked up a date stamp you cannot unsee. The teal is not a colour anyone would reach for now; the shoulders are too wide, the green too loud, the whole outfit tuned to a faith in brightness that the next decade quietly abolished. Within a couple of years Prada would make understatement the only serious position, and Escada's gilded maximalism, the orange and gold it would hang on Tatjana Patitz a year later, would start to look like a costume from a party that had already ended. The garments have not changed a thread. Everything around them has, which is close to what hauntology describes: the presence of something without its substance, an object insisting on a world that has been switched off behind it.
The clothes acquire an agency they never had when new, and it isn't a comfortable one. When the ad was current they pointed outward, at a season, at a shop you could drive to on Saturday. Now they point backward, and they do it whether you want them to or not. The boutique list makes the reversal literal. Margaretha Ley died in 1992, and the house never fully shed her signature; as the money moved toward quiet luxury, Escada held onto its gold buttons and saturated prints a beat too long, and its ownership passed through a long run of hands and troubles. Most of those printed addresses are not Escada boutiques anymore. The directory built to tell you where to go now tells you where things used to be. It also names a way of shopping that has itself largely gone: the place-based, drive-there boutique, an idea the web would have hollowed out regardless of what happened to any single label.
Then there is the physical fact of the image. The photograph fixes an arrangement of light that left that studio once, in 1989 or early 1990, and never again. The teal is a dye lot, a decision made by people in a room; the acid green is another; the white ground is a sheet of paper that was pulped, printed, and posted to Palm Beach and Great Neck. The jacket's atoms are still somewhere, in a landfill or on a vintage rail, but the arrangement, the woman and the colour and the boutiques and the belief that all of it was the future, survives nowhere except on the page. The matter scattered; the configuration stayed put.
Look again at the promise itself: opening spring 1990, San Francisco and Chestnut Hill, printed in the confident present tense of a company sure of its next move. That spring came. The shops opened, and at some point they closed, and the tense the sentence was written in has nothing left to point at. Elliott still holds the page as easily as she did then. Everything behind her has quietly changed address.
Sources:
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About Escada — Escada
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Escada — Encyclopedia.com
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Escada: the rise and fall of a fashion house — FashionUnited