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Burberry’s Fractured Fashion Show Is a Fit for Brexit Britain

Now, the country’s top fashion house has to find a way to sell that divided culture to the world.

Burberry’s Fractured Fashion Show Is a Fit for Brexit Britain
Riccardo Tisci’s second collection ‘Tempest. (Source: Official Twitter page of Burberry)

(Bloomberg) -- Brexit has sparked a bitter debate within the U.K., pitting class against class, cosmopolitan cities against rural enclaves, and Europhiles versus skeptics. Now, the country’s top fashion house has to find a way to sell that divided culture to the world.

Burberry Group Plc designer Riccardo Tisci answered that question Sunday with a show full of contrasts that reflect Britain’s fractured mood. Displayed in two distinct venues, the collection was split into a line-up of hip streetwear looks inspired by nineties youth culture, followed by a series of pleated skirts, blazers and camel coats for shoppers still attached to the brand’s buttoned-up heritage of trench coats and scarves.

Burberry’s Fractured Fashion Show Is a Fit for Brexit Britain

“Burberry represents a lifestyle and pretty much a country,” Tisci said backstage after the show at the Tate Modern museum in London. The divergent parts of the collection “all stem from the same mood, but they are talking to different publics.”

U.K. retailers are preparing for a nasty shock from Brexit, as a potential exit from the European Union without a deal raises concerns about border delays, tariffs and shortages. As an exporter, Burberry has been spared much of the pain of U.K. shoppers’ weak morale, but its goal of joining the top ranks in luxury have put pressure squarely on Tisci, the brand’s first new designer after Christopher Bailey’s 17-year reign.

The event highlighted the first autumn-winter collection since Burberry hired Tisci, the former Givenchy designer whose mix of athletic wear and red-carpet couture saw estimated sales grow sixfold during his tenure at the LVMH-owned luxury brand. His mandate is to bring high-fashion credibility that will attract new shoppers and wean Burberry off stores whose discounting was seen as undermining the brand.

Burberry’s Fractured Fashion Show Is a Fit for Brexit Britain

London-listed Burberry is an anomaly in a fashion world where most houses are either part of a large conglomerate, family-controlled, or privately held. To compete head-on with luxury players like Prada SpA and Kering SA’s Gucci, Tisci has to recruit a new generation of well-heeled shoppers to his sneakers and logo tracksuits while retaining buyers of its $2,000 trench coats and $400 scarves.

Initial Signs

Products from his debut show in September are just beginning to arrive in stores. The company has pointed out positive trends: more wholesale orders from high-fashion vendors and interest from social media, where Instagram and China’s WeChat are key luxury battlegrounds.

“The initial signs are encouraging, but the backdrop of the luxury market might not be as supportive as was a year ago,” said Rogerio Fujimori, luxury analyst at RBC. While shares are up 27 percent since Tisci was appointed last March, they’re down from an August peak as investors worry about how a slowing Chinese economy will impact luxury spending.

At the Sunday show, Tisci showed pink hoodies, flashy puffers trimmed with faux fur, and hiking-inspired sneakers followed by lady-like silk blouses, Savile Row suiting, and cashmere capes. “He has the cool club look as well as the elevated lady, really pinning down how she dresses,” said Elizabeth von der Goltz, global buying director at Richemont’s Net-a-Porter site.

Guests at the show were split into two spaces -- with some seeing the show from a crude arena with concrete and scaffolding while others filtered into a more formal space with the polished wooden pews. Tisci said he wanted to see how presenting the same collection in different environments might impact response. While he declined to give his views on Brexit, his choice of presentation could have been a response to the U.K.’s split personality.

“We live in a time when we’re being injected with images every day,” that influence interpretation of events, Tisci said. With the broad-ranging collection, “we try to bring everyone under the same umbrella.”

--With assistance from Fiona Rutherford and Francine Lacqua.

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Williams in Paris at rwilliams323@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Eric Pfanner at epfanner1@bloomberg.net, John Lauerman

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