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Kerry Taylor’s Passion For Show Sale Reminds Us That 2024 Has Really Been The Year Of The Fashion Auction

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Kerry Taylor’s Passion For Show Sale Reminds Us That 2024 Has Really Been The Year Of The Fashion Auction

In January of this year Kerry Taylor, of Kerry Taylor Auctions—the London sales house which specializes in rare fashion from across the decades and centuries—took herself off to Edinburgh for the day. She wasn’t planning a sightseeing trip—well, not a conventional one, at least: She visited Nina Grant, of the local boutique Corniche who, in her many years of business, had amassed a considerable (and startlingly good) archive of pieces in her store, things she kept if they didn’t sell: from rare Alexander McQueen and Comme des Garcons to the (sadly) barely remembered young London designer John Flett, a contemporary of John Galliano’s and equally as talented.

“I went through everything with Nina—did the evaluation, had fish and chips around the corner—and then flew back,” said Taylor, laughing, before switching into assessing what Grant had with the finely honed (AKA razor-sharp) instincts which have earned her her reputation. “What’s so great about Nina is that she always had an eye for the future, for the most cutting edge fashion—she still does—and what she has is in perfect condition, because it was never worn. To have the likes of a McQueen Joan of Arc ensemble, a Lichtenstein-print Moschino suit, eight pieces from Flett—it’s wonderful.”

Alexander McQueen, fall 1998 ready-to-wear, inspired by Joan of Arc.

Photo: Condé Nast Archive

Image may contain Blouse Clothing Coat Formal Wear Suit Long Sleeve Sleeve Person and Dress

Lot 126 from the Passion for Fashion sale from Kerry Taylor Auctions; a McQueen fall 1998 suit, owned by Corniche’s Nina Grant.

Photo: Courtesy of Kerry Taylor Auctions

All of these will be sold at Taylor’s biannual Passion for Fashion auction, which happens December 10th. And those are just for starters, as Taylor reels off a list of other lots which left me—never mind her—breathless: a Yorkshire family’s 18th century robe a la Francaise heirloom dress; Dior and Galliano from the Paris luxury dealer Jackariaeh Francis; yet more Galliano, including—be still my beating heart—a look from his 1985 collection, The Ludic Game; two Paul Poirets from legendary collector Sandy Schrier and, from another source, Monsieur Poiret’s own rather fabulous black and silver Syrian robe, as well as pieces worn by his wife Denise.

The list goes on: exquisite Jeanne Lanvin dresses (hello, Peter Copping!); a Valentino haute couture gown owned by Audrey Hepburn (hello, Alessandro Michele!); Karl Lagerfeld-era 1970s Chloé (and hello, Chemena Kamali—hope you’re all bidding!); more heart palpitations, for me at least, in the shape of lots from Vivienne Westwood which span her Pirates, Buffalo, and Savages collections; and—just because we have to wrap this up at some point—a rarer-than-rare inky blue embroidered satin coat by Gabrielle ‘Coco’ Chanel dating from 1917. “It was made during the first World War, so the color had to be somber,” Taylor said, “yet the embroideries are quite Edwardian. It’s an extraordinary piece, and I don’t think there’s been an earlier piece at auction—ever.”

All of this is, of course, the stuff quite literally of legend. Yet the subtext here is not just that Taylor has created a showstopper of a sale—it’s that it tops off a 2024 which, it’s fair to say, has been the Year of the Fashion Auction. It feels like we’re reaching peak collectability right now for vintage clothing—and that interest and awareness has never been greater, nor the prices higher. It’s perhaps down to the facts that we’re seeing more and more people in the spotlight wearing it, the proliferation of clothing exhibitions (Taylor and I both enthused about the terrific Outlaws: Fashion Renegades of 80s London show currently on at the Fashion and Textile Museum in the British capital), and that the sustainability inclined impulse to invest in the rarity of the old rather than splurging on the readily available new has really taken hold. Of course, of course: Not many of us are waving our paddles in a bid for a priceless (well, pricey, at any rate) piece of history. Yet it all points to a major cultural shift.

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