Earlier this month at the Grammys, Pharrell Williams hit the red carpet in a striking look: an Ernest W. Baker quilted red leather tracksuit under a faux fur jacket, pointy black boots and diamond-rimmed teardrop-shaped glasses by Tiffany.
It was both rigid and a little sleazy, speedy and yet unhurried. More crucially, it felt like a deeply embedded and tastefully restrained nod to early hip-hop fashion, when louche 1970s sensuality was giving way to ’80s concrete realism. In hip-hop’s 50th anniversary, Mr. Williams, one of the defining music producers of the 2000s and one of the genre’s longstanding style innovators, was sending quietly coded messages about how he has inherited and absorbed the élan of those who came before him.
And with his appointment as the creative director for men’s wear at Louis Vuitton, announced last week, perhaps a quietly coded message about how he would both guide the company moving forward, and how Mr. Williams, the first hip-hop performer to lead a major fashion house, might assume the reins from Virgil Abloh, who held the job until his death in 2020, and whose framework has remained central to subsequent collections.
More than any hip-hop celebrity outside of Ye (formerly Kanye West), Mr. Williams has made carving out provocative fashion territory central to his métier. From art-skate brat to cartoon-bling hyperrealist to funhouse-mirror schoolboy to extravagant hippie, he has been experimenting with his personal canvas for more than two decades. And he has been a high fashion collaborator for almost as long, working with Louis Vuitton in addition to Chanel, Moncler and Tiffany.
Within hip-hop, Mr. Williams has been influential and also an idiosyncratic dandy whose sartorial experiments, especially in more recent years, fall far outside of conventional silhouettes. Frequently, on the red carpet, he’ll wear a slender suit with shorts that hit right above the knee — sometimes successfully, like his black tie look at the 2014 Oscars, and sometimes more awkwardly, like the camouflage get-up at the 2019 Oscars. At the 2014 Grammys, he wore a red leather track jacket with an oversize brown Vivienne Westwood derby, an outfit that launched 1,000 memes. It was a visual distortion from someone who ordinarily presents as tightly controlled, and a pop culture Rorschach test for tolerance of male quirk.
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