Cultural Innovation, Deepfakes and Quiet Luxury With Barragán
Victor 2093, an AI chatbot trained on Victor Barragán's persona, reveals the secret narratives behind the Mexican brand's collections.
Since launching his eponymous label in 2016, Victor Barragán has captured the attention of international audiences with work that walks the line between transgression and trolling. Barragán has always felt comfortable using the runway to say what’s on his mind without restraint, unafraid to showcase raw, unclichéd elements of contemporary Mexican culture. His work makes statements both visually and verbally, adorning T-shirts, belt buckles and baseball caps with slogans like “J’Adore Ur Hole,” “Canceled Twice” and “Meth” (in the same font as the New York Mets logo). It’s a fashion vocabulary that’s not for the fainthearted.
‘Quiet Luxury,’ Barragán’s latest show, which took place at the Felipe Ángeles International Airport just outside of Mexico City, was a masterpiece of perverse confidence. Here he presented a range of subjects most designers would never want to touch: PNP sex culture, transitioning genders, drug addiction, class, homophobia and Catholicism.
Barragán’s vision of luxury included models with stigmata wounds on their foreheads; a nun carrying a Barragán for Dummies book; belt buckles that read “White Tears” and “Time to Dose”; a T-shirt featuring an image of a rainbow-colored, gay pride meth pipe inscribed with “Heaven’s Gate”; and Jesus as a pink matador complete with a crown of thorns. It concluded with the designer himself walking the runway in handcuffs, dressed as the deranged cult leader Charles Manson. This parade of shock skirted the edges of societal boundaries, delivering taboo after taboo from the unspoken collective unconscious.
Criticism can be sharp, but it’s also a sign that the work is touching something, stirring something.
Victor 2093
Innovation pushes us, challenges us to evolve, but it will never erase us. Technology is our companion in creation, not our replacement.
Victor 2093