For Seán McGirr’s cool—and achieved—McQueen resort assortment, all razor sharp tailoring, heiress portrait necklines, and tartan, he appeared to the photographs of British society photographer Dafydd Jones, who recurrently shot for posher than posh Tatler journal. Particularly McGirr was considering of Jones’s guide, England: The Final Hurrah, printed in 2018, which featured the aristocracy at play within the Eighties, with Jones appearing as a lens on the wall because the Vibrant Younger Issues of that period cavorted at popping out events, hunt balls, grand weddings, and college shindigs, all taffeta, tuxes, tiaras, and tousled Hugh Grant hair—oh, and with an excellent, if skewering, dishevelment and abandon as Jones documented evening raucously turning into day. It was all very Brideshead Revisited, or The Line of Magnificence, or Saltburn, simply with out the murder and the bathwater.
McGirr first noticed Jones’s photographs by way of Tumblr, and it was his faculty tutor who instructed him to go take a look at the guide. What attracted McGirr to them yet again was, he mentioned, “this sense that, economically, socially, we’re going again to the ’80s; it’s all about chaos. Additionally, in fact, the perspective. It’s simply so England, you already know?” And in the way in which you must if you’ve taken on the mantle of a home which now not has its founder, you’re trying to discover a connection to that particular person, on this case, Alexander Lee McQueen. McGirr talked about that McQueen himself, introduced up within the hardscrabble East London, ended up near the likes of grande dames Isabella Blow and Daphne Guinness, this even though whereas Jones’s photographs have been being taken, “Lee was a young person, and perhaps in his bed room listening to George Michael.” That’s the opposite factor a couple of home like McQueen; you want to have the ability to spin a story. “I’m Irish,” mentioned McGirr, laughing. “We’re storytellers.”
What this lends to McGirr’s McQueen is one thing the label has lengthy explored: the stress between romanticism and rise up—and a dissection of the dual impulses of British type, the will to decorate up, and the punkish rejection of the exact same. What McGirr has been quickly proving at McQueen is his capacity to subvert the technical language of tailoring. This assortment is chock stuffed with terrific reinterpretations of traditional smokings no matter gender, shrunken in silhouette, or with twisted revers —“I didn’t need them to really feel flat,” he mentioned, “however to have some vitality”—and a preponderance of cummerbund waistlines. The tartan McQueen utilized in his personal collections is right here, if employed sparingly, as a high-necked mini costume and a corduroy-collared coat excellent for stomping throughout the manor grounds. So too are different such British-isms as Argyle sweaters (worn with low-slung trousers), and the Stewart tartan as a draped kilt, all of which is perhaps accessorized with chandelier shards as jewellery. (When you’ve swung from the chandeliers, you may as effectively put on them.)
Different parts of this assortment are from nearer to house. McGirr has been judiciously discovering what he connects with, responds to, loves. Which may imply wanting once more on the poppy print costume Karen Elson wore within the label’s spring 2004 present, Deliverance, now reworked into an uneven chiffon costume or elegant swimsuit. The silky scarf cranium of yore additionally pops up as a costume, or gleams from gothy-clubby jewellery. And with an eye fixed to what appears good to his technology, McGirr has revived the 2010 Manta bag. Like a lot of what’s on provide right here, it’s slightly little bit of a romanticized previous, a soupcon of the quick and livid current, and a headlong dive into the long run.

















































