Martine Rose Stages “Urgent, Sexual” Show – ANOTHER

Mon 13 Jun

Yesterday evening, inside a tunnel-like arch opposite Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens in London, cult designer Martine Rose put on her first in-person show in two years. Backdropped by long walls of black latex curtains, an array of eccentric models – their hair either dripping in grease, or coiffed and bleached in acrid colours – strutted down the runway while Jacob Miller’s reggae hit Baby I Love You So thumped overhead. “I wanted people to smell the latex, I wanted people to see the sweat on their bodies, I wanted people to feel the energy as they walked past,” Rose said backstage of her triumphant return to the runway.

The designer – best known for embracing and assimilating the south London rave and reggae subcultures she grew up around in the 90s – focused this time on the hasty, hurried methods of dress and undress involved in “urgent sexual encounters”. The show opened with a short, sharp soundtrack of heavy breathing, followed by a series of men’s and women’s looks that included frumpy office party attire, rave-ready tracksuits, and scuffed-up denim caps paired with bomber jackets and jeans. Loud, jangly belt chains, earrings left in their packaging, and BDSM cuff-esque detailing all pointed to a potent air of rushed, sordid sexuality.

In a departure from her signature exaggerated, broad-shouldered silhouettes, Rose debuted a “shrunken torso” look, with cropped, tucked-in shirts meant to evoke the feeling of squeezing into something too small. “There’s always the subtext of sex,” she explained of the collection, which mixed casual grunge and smart tailoring seamlessly together. A new series of angular shoes made in collaboration with Nike – sure to be a hit with sneaker obsessives – were described as a “hybrid between a dress shoe and a trainer”.