Guy Laroche had been dead two years when this collection went down the runway. He died in Paris in February 1989, and the couture kept going the way couture usually does, which is to say somebody else took the pencil and the workrooms carried on. That somebody was Angelo Tarlazzi, and he goes uncredited on essentially every copy of this photograph in circulation, all of which caption it Guy Laroche, spring/summer 1991, couture, as though the man had risen for the season.
Tarlazzi's problem was specific. Paris in 1991 belonged to spectacle, to Lacroix's volume and Mugler's sculpted shoulders, while the Laroche name had been built on cutting and tailoring instead. Getting louder would have meant competing on somebody else's terms with a house that had no history of winning that way.
You can see the alternative in one suit. The jacket is cream, collarless, closing off-centre, shoulders squared but not exaggerated, sleeves turned back at the cuff. It could be 1963. Then look at what has been bolted onto it: paste buttons in three sizes, a pair at the throat, a pair at the waist, one on each cuff, none of them matching, all of them enormous. The necklace continues the same jeweller's vocabulary upward in gold sprays and pale crystal, sitting close enough to the collarbone that it reads as part of the garment rather than as something added over it. Yasmeen Ghauri wears the whole thing with a green straw bow pinned into her hair and a pair of lilac gloves held, not worn, and the gloves are the only soft thing in the frame.
The logic holds. A cream jacket with no collar and no lapel gives you an uninterrupted field, so every piece of paste on it stays legible from the back of a salon. Make the jacket busy and the buttons disappear. The expensive part of a couture suit is mostly the part nobody is meant to see, the seaming and the fittings and the interior, and here all of that invisible labour exists to hold up the visible noise.
Ghauri was nineteen that January, two years into the work that made her and walking Paris and Milan in the same months. She gives the clothes almost nothing, which is the correct decision: chin level, hands low, no performance at all. Set that against her greatcoat at Ferretti a year later, which needs the swagger and gets it. Yasmin Le Bon walked this same collection.
Tarlazzi kept the couture until 1993. That September the house announced that Michel Klein, then thirty-five and running his own ready-to-wear line, would take it over from January 1994, with Tarlazzi staying on for the ready-to-wear. Klein went in 1997, Alber Elbaz replaced him and left for Saint Laurent the following year, and the job has turned over steadily ever since. None of them inherited anything loud enough to carry a handover, which is the risk a house runs when it puts its money in the cut. Nobody remembers a seam. They remember the buttons.
Sources:
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Chronicle — The New York Times
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Guy Laroche, spring/summer 1991 haute couture — Yasmin Le Bon catwalk archive
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Guy Laroche Designer Spotlight — Ian Drummond Vintage