Skip to main content
BoF Logo

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

Noir’s Ode to Ecology

Kei Ninomiya offered a highly poetic take on the subject of sustainability. Elsewhere, Haider Ackermann delivered a mature outing.
Noir Kei Ninomiya Spring/Summer 2020 | Source: INDIGITAL.TV
By
  • Angelo Flaccavento

PARIS, France — Sustainability is fashion's latest mantra, and the origin of another bunch of marketing clichés. Leave it to the Japanese to offer a highly imaginative, emotional and ultimately poetic take on the subject. It came from the designer Kei Ninomiya, the mastermind behind the Comme des Garçons label Noir and, on purely creative terms, the heir apparent to Rei Kawakubo.

This was Noir's most accomplished and captivating show since the label hit Paris a few years ago. Held in the dark of a cavernous space in the underbelly of Pont Alexandre III, it was both apocalyptic and ultimately relieving. The parade of looks opened with total white, with dresses that resembled snowy formations or ice crystals, which got stained with black as it all progressed, until it was full black and military green, and more shiny black and dresses looking like cages. As the music got louder and more disturbing, the sense of angst reached a climax, only to be swiped away by the final, ethereal passage of white techno nymph dresses worn under transparent plastic cages. The metaphor, if there was one, was this: from beauty to chaos and destruction to rebirth.

Noir Kei Ninomiya | Source: INDIGITAL.TV Noir Kei Ninomiya | Source: INDIGITAL.TV

Noir Kei Ninomiya | Source: INDIGITAL.TV

View CollectionOpens in new window ]

Ninomya seems to have taken over from Kawakubo the task of creating ‘post-fashion’ that has nothing to do with selling dresses. His work does not ask to be judged in commercial terms. As an inventor, he is a punk version — minus the colors — of Italian master of architectural dressing Roberto Capucci. He explores repetition as a constructive tool and has the rare ability to get poetry out of geometry. It was magic.

ADVERTISEMENT

An Armani-esque feeling of purification pervaded a very good Haider Ackermann show that, finally, was light on the brocades. The first, completely greige block was actually very Armani, in an Ackermann way of course. Even when working in restraint, subtraction or moderation, the Colombia-born French designer manages to imbue the proceedings with a sense of slouch and a boho nonchalance that are all his own. Mixing men and womenswear, the show touched cornerstones of precise suiting and very feminine — sexy, dare we say — dressing, offering a solid line-up of Ackermann-ism, in bold solid colors. Brocade crept into the end, lightly, as a beautiful conclusion to a mature outing.

Noir Kei Ninomiya | Source: INDIGITAL.TV Noir Kei Ninomiya | Source: INDIGITAL.TV

Haider Ackermann | Source: INDIGITAL.TV

View CollectionOpens in new window ]

Editor's Note: This article was revised on September 30, 2019. An earlier version of this article misstated that Haider Ackermann is Belgian. This is incorrect. Ackermann is French and was born in Colombia.

© 2026 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Fashion Week
Independent show reviews from fashion’s top critics.

Clash of the New Titans

Haider at Tom Ford, Pieter at Alaïa, comings and goings in fashion, and Nico at Courrèges coming up fast, all of it leading to a day of dynamic fashion in Paris, writes Tim Blanks.


Paris Day Three: Variables and Constants

One of the busiest days of Paris fashion week featured a hello at Balmain, a goodbye at Alaïa and variations on signature visions at Courrèges, The Row, Dries Van Noten and Tom Ford.


view more
Latest News & Analysis
Unrivalled, world class journalism across fashion, luxury and beauty industries.

Can Big Luxury Find Its New Look?

Sex sells — if anyone can figure out what sexy means in 2026. Robert Williams tracks the search for a new silhouette at Kering’s Gucci, LVMH’s Dior and more.


Estée Lauder’s Surprise Acquisition, Explained

The American cosmetic giant’s buyout of Ayurvedic beauty line Forest Essentials came as a surprise. By picking an under-the-radar brand it knows well, the company can show that it’s still in the M&A game without needing to outbid rivals.


VIEW MORE
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON