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In the glittering, rigidly structured world of haute couture, fashion is often defined by a pursuit of conventional beauty, symmetry, and glamour. Then there is Comme des Garçons.
Founded in Tokyo by the enigmatic Rei Kawakubo in 1969, Comme des Garcons (French for "Like some boys") has spent more than half a century dismantling the very definition of what it means to get dressed. It is not merely a clothing brand; it is an avant-garde artistic movement, a multi-million-dollar commercial empire, and a profound philosophical inquiry into the relationship between the human body and fabric. By challenging Western ideals of silhouette and taste, Kawakubo did not just change fashion—she rewrote its DNA.
When Rei Kawakubo first brought Comme des Garçons to Paris in 1981, the fashion capital was dominated by the hyper-feminine, colorful, and glamorous aesthetic of the era—think padded shoulders, high heels, and opulence. Kawakubo presented something entirely alien.
Her early collections featured models walking down the runway in oversized, asymmetrical, distressed, and completely black garments. The clothes were full of holes, frayed edges, and wrapped layers that obscured the female form rather than accentuating it.
The Western press, startled and occasionally horrified, dubbed the look "Hiroshima Chic" or "The Destroy Look." Critics questioned whether these garments could even be considered clothes. Yet, what the traditionalists saw as nihilism, the fashion vanguard recognized as a revolution. Kawakubo was introducing a Japanese aesthetic rooted in wabi-sabi—the beauty of imperfection, impermanence, and incompletion. She proved that there was profound elegance in darkness and asymmetry.
At the heart of Comme des Garçons is a relentless rejection of the status quo. Kawakubo famously stated, "Comme des Garçons is a gift to oneself, not something to appeal to or attract the opposite sex." This philosophy directly opposes the historical trajectory of women’s fashion, which has frequently designed clothes to flatter, constrict, or display the body for the external gaze.
Instead, Kawakubo treats the body as a canvas—or sometimes, an obstacle to be overcome.
Perhaps the most famous manifestation of this was the Spring/Summer 1997 collection, officially titled Body Meets Dress, Dress Meets Body, but colloquially known as the "Lumps and Bumps" collection. Models walked out wearing stretch-fabric dresses stuffed with down pad inserts in irregular places—the hips, the back, the shoulders.
It distorted the human figure into something bulbous, strange, and strangely beautiful. It forced the viewer to ask: Where does the body end, and where does the clothing begin?
[ Traditional Fashion ] -----> Accentuates the natural human form
[ Comme des Garçons ] -----> Distorts, expands, and reimagines the form
Anarchic creativity on the runway rarely translates to corporate survival, let alone massive global success. Yet, under the business acumen of Kawakubo’s husband and CEO, Adrian Joffe, Comme des Garçons has grown into an incredibly robust and diverse commercial powerhouse.
The brand functions as a brilliant ecosystem where high-concept art fuels mainstream consumer desire. comme-desgarcons.uk
Comme des Garçons Play: Launched in 2002, this casual streetwear line features the iconic bug-eyed heart logo designed by Polish artist Filip Pagowski. It is accessible, wearable, and wildly profitable, funding the boundary-pushing runway shows.
The Fragrance Line: Rejecting traditional floral and musky scents, CdG revolutionized perfumery by bottling synthetic and industrial smells. Their fragrances boast notes of tar, printer toner, dry cleaning, and concrete, turning the avant-garde into an olfactory experience.
Dover Street Market: Created by Kawakubo and Joffe, this multi-brand retail concept is a cross between a high-fashion department store and a contemporary art museum. It provides a platform not just for CdG lines, but for emerging designers worldwide, redefining modern retail.
Through these varied sub-brands, Comme des Garçons achieved the ultimate fashion paradox: remaining fiercely independent and underground while operating a global retail empire.
Comme des Garçons was also a pioneer in the art of the high-low collaboration long before it became an industry standard. Kawakubo saw partnerships not as mere marketing ploys, but as opportunities for creative friction.
The brand's long-standing partnership with Nike has resulted in some of the most sought-after sneaker releases in history, seamlessly blending athletic utility with conceptual design. Similarly, their work with Converse, featuring the Play heart logo, turned the simple Chuck Taylor into a permanent fixture of 21st-century street style. From high-end luxury partnerships with Louis Vuitton to accessible capsules with H&M, CdG proved that avant-garde sensibilities could thrive in any context.
In 2017, the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute dedicated its Spring Exhibition to Rei Kawakubo. She was only the second living designer to receive a solo monograph show at the Met, following Yves Saint Laurent in 1983. It was a definitive coronation of her impact on human culture.
The influence of Comme des Garçons is visible everywhere in contemporary fashion. Generations of master designers—including Martin Margiela, Ann Demeulemeester, Helmut Lang, and John Galliano—have cited Kawakubo as a guiding light. Furthermore, she has actively fostered new talent under the CdG umbrella, launching the careers of phenomenal designers like Junya Watanabe and Chitose Abe (of Sacai).
"I standardly work with three rules," Kawakubo once remarked. "The first is to do what has never been done before. The second is to do it with absolute freedom. The third is to look for something new."
Comme des Garçons remains a vital reminder of what fashion can be when it refuses to compromise. In a world increasingly driven by fleeting algorithms, fast-fashion replication, and safe commercial choices, Kawakubo’s house stands as a monument to pure, unadulterated creativity.
It tells us that clothing does not have to be comfortable, it does not have to be pretty, and it certainly does not have to make sense to everyone. It only needs to provoke, to challenge, and to make us look at the world a little differently. Fifty years on, the world is still trying to catch up.
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