The Rake

RALPH LAUREN: AMERICA’S POET LAUREATE OF FASHION

Source: Ralph Lauren takes a standing ovation after the unveiling of his Fall 2017 collection.

Ralph Lauren combined his love of fashion and vintage cars when he showcased his latest collection in his multi-level garage in Bedford, New York. Many of Mr. Lauren’s designs reflected the automobile-themed setting.

As we scan the horizon for a deeper understanding of America, what it was, what it is and what it can be, we are often met by a miasmic haze of confusion. The America I grew up admiring, the America of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, of Bob Dylan and Lou Reed, of Jackson Pollock and Jean-Michel Basquiat, of Salinger and Steinbeck, a country where the downtrodden were heroic and the go-getter could rise to the top, seems to have regressed and transformed beyond recognition. In its place stands a land divided. But it was one evening in New York, on September 12, 2017, that I was finally reminded of the poetic grandeur of America, the extraordinary inclusiveness and egalitarianism of the country I grew up in. I was reminded of all this, of the best aspects of an amazing country, by the man that I consider America’s poet laureate of fashion, Ralph Lauren. Though to affix the label ‘fashion’ to what he does flirts with reckless miscomprehension.

Mr. Lauren, as I refer to him, distils and communicates a sense of breathtaking optimism and of the American dream, which he is a living example of, through the garments he makes. This is a vision unaffected by the capriciousness of trend. What he creates is powerful and eternal. It unites the best parts of American culture, from its most rural to its most cosmopolitan, into a vision for classic elegance and intemporal style. The setting

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Rake

The Rake4 min read
Birthday Honours
Contrariness can be a wonderful innovator. The greatest romantic novels — Shelley’s Frankenstein, Austen’s best-known bouts of barbed gentility, the Sunday-night screen adaptation fare of Hugo and Tolstoy — always raised a middle finger to the formal
The Rake7 min read
Invest
The phrase ‘if you can’t beat them, join them’ springs to mind when it comes to the nicknames the watch community applies to iconic timepieces. One would think the marketing bods at Rolex would shy away from anything that conflicts with the house’s m
The Rake4 min read
Gods Of Creation
Michael Browne has a particular sense of mission. His love of shape and precision has made him famous across the world. His training began in 2008 at Paul Smith Bespoke, and continued in 2010 with the masters of statuesque tailoring, Joe Morgan and R

Related