{"id":11145,"date":"2012-06-13T06:58:08","date_gmt":"2012-06-13T05:58:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=11145"},"modified":"2012-06-13T06:58:08","modified_gmt":"2012-06-13T05:58:08","slug":"when-you-are-queen-christian-louboutin-at-the-design-museum","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2012\/06\/13\/when-you-are-queen-christian-louboutin-at-the-design-museum\/","title":{"rendered":"When You Are Queen: Christian Louboutin at the Design Museum"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last time I bought a new pair of high heels, an eleven-year old admired them.<\/p>\n
‘I like your shoes!’ she said. ‘They have red bits at the back!’<\/p>\n
‘Thanks,’ I said, beating a swift retreat before she noticed that the ‘red bits’ were in fact open wounds filled with my encrusted blood, patching the backs of my ankles like some kind of visceral rash.<\/p>\n
I should have said ‘They’re Christian Louboutin’.<\/p>\n
Christian Louboutin's 'Ballerina' slippers, with an 8-inch heel<\/p><\/div>\n
The shoe designer beloved by female celebrities everywhere (Jennifer Lopez has a whole song about them<\/a>) is so proud of his trademark ‘red sole’ that he recently took erstwhile collaborator Yves Saint-Laurent to court over red sole copyright infringement. He’s also currently the subject of a career retrospective at London’s Design Museum.<\/p>\n
He’s notorious for being one of the first designers to insist, in the early 90s, on a heel that truly towers – his shoes average at about 4 1\/2 inches; the highest peak at dizzying 6 (‘but mostly only dancers can wear them<\/a>‘) and if you’re looking for someone to blame when you survey the heights on the high-street <\/a>and sigh, you could be more unjust than to point your finger at this foot-obsessed Frenchman.<\/p>\n
As a teenager, Louboutin’s eye was caught by a ‘No Stilettos’ sign at the Museum of Oceanic Art, Paris: ‘I wanted to defy that,’ he said. ‘I wanted to create something that broke rules and made women feel confident and empowered.’ He’s stuck to this original image for most of his career: there are very few wedges or block heels in his collections; instead, his heels are thin, vertiginously high and splattered with those red soles.<\/p>\n
Where such heights can lead is well illustrated by the fate that meets
Little Women<\/strong>‘s sixteen-year-old Meg, who wears high
heels to a ball – ‘The stupid high heel turned… It
aches so, I can hardly stand, and I don’t know how I’m ever
going to get home’.<\/p>\n The sign Louboutin recalls inspiring him as a
child<\/p><\/div>\n
He’s predictably fascinated with elevation – the
exhibition is full of ‘pedestals’ and
‘birds’. But he’s gone a lot further than previous
designers: Meg may have been dowdy in comparison, but even the
flappers of the Twenties had modest
block heels<\/a>, and the Fifties heel looks almost
mumsy<\/a> nowadays.<\/p>\n
One of the pairs exhibited here is accompanied by an
apologia <\/em>from Louboutin, thus: ‘This shoe is not
suitable for walking in. You can only walk from the taxi to the
nightclub, and back, on the arm of a man’. When asked about
the point that women can’t run in his heels, intended for
his ‘confident and empowered’ working women
(apparently) Louboutin was incredulous: ‘Who
runs at work?<\/a>‘.<\/p>\n
Yet he’s also fascinated by showgirls and
‘classic’ vintage-style women (such as his great
admirer, Dita Von Teese, who makes a holographic appearance in
this exhibition morphing into a Louboutin pump, in a rather
literal appropriation of the fetish we’ll come to
presently). Such women, he says, can dance and gyrate for hours
at a stretch from atop dizzying heels – Louboutin learned
all about this during an early career stint at the Folies
Bergere, where showgirls used to put cuts of bloodless meat
inside their heels to make them more comfortable.<\/p>\n
Perhaps this is echoed in the sexualised red Louboutin sole
(originally hastily-applied Chanel nail varnish) – a flash
of red as easily representing the raw and bloodied foot itself
as the raw and (un)bridled sexuality of the wearer.<\/p>\n
Helmut
Newton's Self Portrait With Wife and Models<\/p><\/div>\n
‘A good shoe is one that doesn’t dress you but
undresses you’, Christian reckons – a statement
with which Helmut Newton (left) would undoubtedly have agreed.
The short David Lynch \/ Louboutin collaboration film
Fetish<\/strong> (2007), extracts from which are on display
here, shows sequences of otherwise naked women
wearing a series of ‘unwearable’ Louboutin
shoes<\/a> – following Louboutin’s conviction
that the part of the female body most naturally fetishised
is (you guessed it) the foot.<\/p>\n
He’s even got a mini foot anatomy: one of the pumps
on display here has a very low vamp, which was initially
unpopular. ‘Then I realised, it’s because
of
the slit<\/em>‘, he recalls – an unfortunate
word, given that he means ‘toe cleavage’.
Too much ‘slit’ apparently makes women feel
‘dirty’, but Louboutin’s well into it,
although the instep is his
favourite part of the foot<\/a>, perhaps because of his
famous belief that the appeal of the high heel is its approximation
of the shape a woman’s foot assumes during
orgasm<\/a>.<\/p>\n
Of course, Sigmund Freud uses the shoe and foot as
an illustration for his writings on the fetish
– the mother’s shoe, says Sigmund, represents
the penis the child originally assumed she has<\/a>,
and to fixate on it assuages castration anxiety. But
symbolic castration via the foot pops up in
Louboutin’s favourite fairy tale (whose
centrepiece shoes he’s working
on for an upcoming
<\/strong>film<\/a>):<\/p>\n
‘[The eldest step-sister] could not get
her big toe into it, and the shoe was too
small for her. Then her mother gave her a
knife and said: “Cut the toe off; when
you are Queen you will have no more need to go
on foot.”<\/p>\n
The maiden cut the toe off, forced the foot
into the shoe, swallowed the pain, and went
out to the King’s son […] He
looked down at her foot and saw how the blood
was running out of her shoe, and how it had
stained her white stocking quite
red.’<\/p>\n
–
Cinderella<\/strong>, The Brothers
Grimm<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
The mad but occasionally insightful Bruno
Bettleheim<\/a> sees the stepsisters here
attempting to make their big feet more
dainty, ‘and therefore prove their
femininity’ through a symbolic
castration<\/a> (with a literal twist in
stage versions, where they are usually in
drag). The problem of the shoe being too
dainty is one surprisingly near to
Louboutin’s methods: although the
average female foot size is a 5, he
designs and constructs his shoes in size 4
‘because I prefer to work on a small
thing’.<\/p>\n
‘He understands women and makes them
feel like Cinderellas’ purrs Diane
von Furstenberg on the designer. Indeed,
it feels appropriate that
stilettos<\/em>, whose c20th
renaissance is credited primarily to the
1950s couturier Roger
Vivier<\/a> (for Dior) owe their name to
the Italian ‘dagger’ (hence
their unpopularity with parquet
flooring).<\/p>\n
For me, the images in
Fetish <\/strong>of these women
crawling and sidling about in
painfully unwearable shoes sums up
this retrospective rather well: a
fascination with immobility, and a
craving for Fabulous Female
Domination that suggests more
power than it would actually have
were it being negotiated from atop
a pair of Louboutin
pigalles<\/em>.<\/p>\n
But you
look<\/em> like you could
walk down the treacherously
lumpy terrain of my naked
back, make me lick your
Louboutin
boots…<\/p>\n
‘I declare, it
really seems like being
a fine young lady, to
come home from the party
in a carriage, and sit
in my dressing-gown with
a maid to wait on
me,’ said Meg, as
Jo bound up her foot
with arnica.<\/p>\n
– Louisa May
Alcott,
Little
Women<\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n
<\/a>
Elevation<\/h3>\n
Venus in Furs<\/h3>\n
<\/a>
The fetish<\/h3>\n
Domination<\/h3>\n