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Plutonic Rainbows

Standing After the Last Bus

There is a particular kind of cinder-block bus shelter that you only really see on rural A-roads and county B-roads in England, sat at a passing place rather than a village proper, with a metal-frame bench bolted to a concrete floor and a sloped asphalt roof gone green at the edges. The timetable behind the perspex is from 2009. The route number on it served somewhere twice a day, once in the morning toward the market town and once back in the late afternoon, and that route has not run since the council pulled support during one of the cycles of funding cuts that have been rolling through county transport budgets since the 1985 Transport Act first handed the question of who runs which bus to the open market.

The shelter is still there. That is the part I cannot get past. The bench is still bolted down, the roof still keeps most of the rain off, and on the inside walls there is graffiti that has weathered into the concrete the way lichen does. Someone in 2003 wrote a name and a year. Someone later scratched it out. Nobody has been waiting here for a bus in any meaningful sense for over a decade, and yet the structure is maintained well enough that it has not been demolished, because demolishing it would cost money the parish does not have, and there is a small and stubborn possibility that the route might come back, which in practice it almost certainly will not.

I find these shelters reassuring and unbearable in roughly equal measure. Reassuring because they record a moment when the state believed that a person standing at a passing place, two miles from the nearest village, deserved a roof and a bench while they waited for a bus that the council had paid an operator to run at a loss because the route mattered to the people who used it. Unbearable because the building has outlived the belief that put it there, and now stands in the landscape as a kind of physical fossil of an idea about what the public was owed.

Bus deregulation outside London began with the 1985 Act, which abolished road service licensing and let any operator run more or less any route they wanted to, and removed the local authority's power to set fares, frequencies, or routes for profitable services. The pitch was that competition would revive a sector that had been declining for two decades. In the cities and on inter-urban routes that more or less worked, by some measures. In rural areas it did not. Tribune's reporting on the post-deregulation arc puts the loss at more than one in four county and rural routes vanishing over the last decade alone, with much of the damage compounded by the 2012 cut to the Bus Service Operators Grant, which fell harder on rural mileage than on urban density.

What is left is the architecture. The 1970s and 1980s civic imagination put cinder-block shelters at every passing place that had any plausible claim to a stop, because at the time the question was not whether anyone would be there, but whether the network would reach them when they were. The buildings cost almost nothing to put up and almost nothing to leave standing. The route was the expensive thing, and the route is what got withdrawn.

I think about the world before the index when I pass these shelters, because they belong to the same order of fact. Once a thing existed in the world, was funded by a shared agreement, and produced a small printed sheet pinned behind perspex saying when the next service would arrive. Pull the funding and the printed sheet stays where it was, the perspex yellows, the bench still takes a person's weight. The withdrawal is administrative; the building is concrete.

Drive past the same shelter often enough and you start to notice the way local memory holds it. People still call it the stop, even though nothing stops there. Hikers use it for shelter in bad weather. Council contractors strim the verge around it twice a year on a schedule that nobody can quite explain. It is not abandoned, exactly. It is post-functional, kept warm by the small possibility that someone in some future budget cycle will decide a passing place on a B-road deserves two buses a day again. I do not think they will. The shelters do not seem to mind.

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Past OpenAI

The Bloomberg note landed late on Wednesday and CNBC confirmed it within the hour. Anthropic is in talks to raise around $50 billion at a valuation between $850 and $900 billion, with the board meeting expected to settle the round in May. If the high end holds, that puts the company past OpenAI, which closed its last round at $852 billion in late March.

The arithmetic on this is the part that should make anyone reading it pause. In February, Anthropic raised $30 billion at a $380 billion valuation. Less than three months later, the company is fielding preemptive offers at more than double that figure. Two and a half times in eleven weeks. The previous round had not fully closed in the public mind before the next one started forming around it.

What is doing the work, by all accounts, is Claude Code. Anthropic disclosed earlier this month that annualised revenue had crossed $30 billion, driven heavily by the coding product. The framing of Anthropic as a research lab playing commercial catch-up is no longer operating. The new framing is that Anthropic is the inference company that found a real enterprise wedge, and OpenAI is the consumer brand still trying to make consumer behaviour pay at the same scale.

The IPO talk is the other surprise. Bloomberg's sources put a possible filing window as early as October. That is aggressive for a company that closed its previous private round in February, and it implies Dario Amodei's circle thinks the next several months of revenue growth will support a public-market story without needing another private round to bridge it. Reporting earlier this month suggested that some of OpenAI's existing backers were already showing buyer's remorse as Anthropic kept pulling enterprise revenue quietly across the table. The October timing suggests Anthropic wants its filing on the tape before that sentiment becomes permanent.

There is the question of where $50 billion actually comes from. Google and Amazon are already in for tens of billions in performance-based commitments, and sovereign funds, Middle Eastern in particular, will pick up most of the rest. Whether any of this is genuinely being priced as equity, or whether the structure is closer to a forward purchase commitment for compute dressed as one, is the question nobody at the table wants asked too loudly. That distinction is roughly what the Microsoft and OpenAI restructuring admitted out loud on Sunday. Money goes in, compute spend comes back out the other side, and the headline valuation is the part that ends up on the chart.

What I keep returning to is the velocity. $380 billion to $900 billion, in private negotiations, with no term sheet signed and no event yet to mark the change. The market has already decided what Anthropic is worth. The board meeting in May is now a forcing function on a number that has already moved without it.

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Anthropic's Glasswing Stalls

Anthropic wants to take its most capable model, Claude Mythos, from a controlled set of about 50 organisations to roughly 120, adding names like Amazon, Google and JPMorgan under a programme the company is calling Project Glasswing. The White House, according to reporting today in the New York Post and CNN, has told Anthropic it is against the expansion. The objection is not about competition or pricing. It is about the model itself.

Mythos is the system Anthropic itself characterised, in internal analysis later summarised by reporters, as capable of exploiting electric grids, power plants and hospitals if it fell to the wrong operator. Dark Reading's piece this week, written from panic in the Japanese banking sector, describes Mythos finding previously unknown vulnerabilities in every browser and operating system tested against it, including one defect that had sat undisturbed for twenty-seven years. Finance minister Satsuki Katayama called the model's mere existence a crisis already upon us. A Japanese banking executive, quoted in the same piece, said that in the event of a customer-data leak the institution might have no choice but to shut its systems and conduct all transactions in cash. Those are not the sentences a regulator chooses lightly.

What makes the Glasswing fight strange is the Pentagon backdrop. Earlier this year, after Anthropic refused to grant the Department of Defense unrestricted use of its models for surveillance and weaponry, Pete Hegseth's office declared the company a supply-chain risk to national security, the kind of classification usually reserved for foreign adversaries. NBC covered the timeline. A long thread of mine on what Anthropic was trying to keep off the table is in Defenders First. And yet, days later, CNN was reporting that the same administration was looking for ways around its own restriction so that selected agencies, including the NSA, could keep testing Mythos against Microsoft systems and other domestic targets. Bloomberg confirmed the NSA work this morning.

So the position the White House has taken on Glasswing is, more or less, that a tool the federal government cannot resist using itself is too dangerous for JPMorgan to license. That argument has internal logic, the bank does not have a clearance pipeline, and credentialled access is an entirely different posture from a private SLA, but it is still an argument the administration has to make in public while quietly running the model against adversary infrastructure. The contradiction is the news.

It also, awkwardly, is not the first time Mythos has been somewhere it should not be. Three weeks ago a contractor with incidental access guessed an endpoint from leaked naming conventions, the episode I wrote up in A Contractor Had Mythos. Dark Reading nods at the same incident in its Tokyo piece. The inner circle was already porous before any expansion happened. Glasswing, by enlarging the circle from 50 to 120, multiplies the attack surface for exactly that kind of perimeter leak, and Anthropic's own threat modelling is the strongest argument against doing it.

There is a version of this story where the White House wins, the rollout pauses, the 70 candidate firms wait six months, and Anthropic spends the time tightening operational security around the Mythos endpoints it already operates. There is another version where the company decides the commercial pressure from Amazon and Google outweighs the political cost and pushes Glasswing live anyway. The interesting question is not which version we get. It is whether the precedent here, a sitting administration trying to gate a private firm's customer list on national-security grounds without naming a statute, survives the next change of party. That is the part nobody is writing about yet.

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Half of One Per Cent

The click was always a recoil. The Zip drive's heads would extract themselves from the cartridge, retract into the body of the drive, then return, then extract again, in a small mechanical loop that produced the characteristic metallic clack roughly twice a second. Each click was the drive trying to reset its head positioning after failing to read whatever it had just been asked to find. From outside the case it sounded vaguely like a bird trapped in a wall.

Iomega launched the Zip drive at COMDEX in 1994 and shipped it the following year. A hundred megabytes for two hundred dollars, in a cartridge slightly thicker than a 3.5-inch floppy, at a moment when the standard floppy still topped out at 1.44 MB. For three or four years it was the obvious answer to the question of how to move a graphic-design project, an undergraduate thesis, or a corporate quarterly between machines. The drives appeared in offices, in studios, in bedrooms running early DTP software. Then the clicking started.

In January 1998 the phrase "click of death" appeared in print, attached to Iomega's drives, and by September that year a class action had been filed in Delaware under the state's Consumer Fraud Act. Iomega's public response was a number: fewer than half of one per cent of users were affected. The figure was repeated in interviews, on the company's website, in the boilerplate that Macworld used when it covered the dispute. The implication was containment.

What the number left out was the contagion. A Zip cartridge that had been written to by a damaged drive carried the misalignment forward, in the form of corrupted servo data that the next clean drive would then attempt to follow. The clean drive would mis-track. The miscalibration would propagate. A single sick unit could pass the failure to a chain of replacements, which is why people in the late 1990s began keeping their healthy drives away from disks of unknown provenance the way librarians keep moths away from textile collections. Steve Gibson at GRC kept a public FAQ documenting the mechanism, and the term spread far enough that within a few years it had stopped meaning Zip drives specifically and started meaning any disk failure that announced itself audibly.

The lawsuit eventually settled around a packaging disclaimer. Sales fell as CD-R undercut the cost-per-megabyte. By 2003 Iomega had stopped selling Zips in any meaningful quantity. The company tried a CD-burner brand using the Zip name and a tiny sub-floppy called Clik!, neither survived. PC World later listed the Zip drive as both the fifteenth worst technology product of all time and, in a different list, the twenty-third best, which is the only honest summary anyone produced.

The strange afterlife is in aviation. Jeppesen distributed navigation database updates on Zip disks into 2014. Universal Avionics took TAWS uploads from them at the same date. Pilots in regional fleets were carrying 100 MB cartridges into cockpits twenty years after the click of death entered print, because the certification cost of changing a flight-management input is high enough to outlast a generation of consumer storage.

The haunting, though, sits with the people who lost a project to one. They learned, before their twenties were out, that physical removable media could betray you silently, and could spread the betrayal to whatever you tried to use as a backup. A whole cohort now treats anything that is not duplicated to a second cloud as already lost. The cloud-first reflex has many causes. One of them clicks twice a second, in a beige plastic case, somewhere in the second half of the 1990s.

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Python Jackets, Ostrich Jeans

When fashion writes the Hermès story now, the modern chapter opens in 1997. Martin Margiela arrives, the cigarette shoulder hangs in a museum somewhere, the orange-and-white archive photographs against beige walls, quiet luxury becomes a phrase the resale market can charge for. Everything before that is flattened into "the saddlery years" and a Birkin anecdote on a Paris-London flight in 1984.

It is a tidy version of events, and it leaves out the man who actually ran the ready-to-wear for most of the 1980s and into the 1990s. Eric Bergère was hired by Jean-Louis Dumas in the early eighties, on the same brief Margiela would later inherit: modernise the apparel without scaring the saddlery. Bergère worked alongside Bernard Sanz. The pair did not produce a quiet, traceless Hermès. They produced python motorcycle jackets and ostrich-skin jeans, which Women's Wear Daily, in a description I keep coming back to, called "a snazzier version of what Hermès has been all along."

There is a Getty image from the Fall 1985 runway, slightly underexposed in that mid-eighties magazine way, where you can see what they were actually doing. Hermès was not behaving like Hermès. It was behaving like a Milan brand with a leather budget and a saddler's hand. The python and the ostrich were not novelty pieces, they were the argument: the house would treat exotic skin the way it treated calf, as a workable material, not as a shrine. You could put it through a sewing machine and call it a jacket, and the jacket could be slung over the back of a chair like any other.

The numbers underneath this are easy to miss. When Dumas took the company in 1978, annual sales were around fifty million dollars. By 1990 they were four hundred and sixty million. That is the period Bergère was designing through. The Birkin went on sale in 1984 and the Kelly stayed where it was, but neither of those bags can carry a near-tenfold sales jump on their own. Something else was working. The ready-to-wear was working.

What I think happened is that Margiela's reputation absorbed the whole story afterwards. He arrived as a celebrity-resistant deconstructionist at exactly the moment the rest of Paris was hiring superstars (Galliano at Dior, McQueen at Givenchy, Tom Ford taking Gucci into different territory entirely), and the press needed Hermès to fit the narrative. Margiela became the designer who modernised Hermès. The designer who had already modernised Hermès once, fifteen years earlier, became a Getty caption.

Bergère is still working. There is an Instagram post from a recent Arles vintage pop-up dated 09–14 February, "Eric Bergere Paris Vintage 1995/2001 Arles rue des Suisses," which is the sort of footnote that tells you the man kept a studio and a client list well after the official Hermès chapter closed. Whether the resale market eventually catches up to the work, the way it has caught up to Margiela's tenure, is another question. Resale follows narrative, and the narrative is set.

Sometimes a designer is the one the brand remembers. Sometimes the designer is the one the brand needed in order to become the thing the next designer got remembered for. The python jackets did the unglamorous version of that work, and the work did not get a name on it.

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At the Third Stroke

Twelve million people a year still dial 123. They are paying thirty-odd pence for a courtesy that every device in their pocket performs for free, with greater accuracy, without billing them, and without the small ritual of holding a handset to the ear. Yet the calls keep coming. They spike on Remembrance Day. They spike on New Year's Eve. They spike on the two Sundays a year when the clocks change, as if a watch needs absolution from a more authoritative source before it can be trusted again.

The British speaking clock launched on the 24th of July 1936. Its first voice was a London telephonist called Ethel Jane Cain, who won a General Post Office competition and ten guineas for the job. The original machine was the size of a small room, all motors and glass discs and photocells and valves, her voice etched optically onto the glass like a film soundtrack. To reach her you dialled TIM, which spelled itself as 846 on the alphabetical Director-system dials of London, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Liverpool and Manchester. Other parts of the country dialled 952, then 80, then 8081, and only in the early 1990s was the number flattened to 123 everywhere.

Cain was followed by Pat Simmons in 1963, then Brian Cobby in 1985 (the same Brian Cobby who counted in the Thunderbirds opening, which is the kind of fact that sounds invented), then Sara Mendes da Costa in 2007. Four voices in ninety years. Each one is still out there, archived on retired machines at the British Horological Institute in Nottinghamshire, the way a body is preserved at a state funeral that nobody attends.

What I find strange is not that the service exists. Public infrastructure outlasts its purpose all the time. The strange thing is that anyone is still using it. The phone in my hand keeps time to within milliseconds of an atomic clock. Big Ben itself is now synchronised to BT's service, which means the speaking clock and Big Ben are two outputs of the same hidden reference, performing the same fact in different theatres. The building tells one audience. The voice tells another.

I think part of the answer is that a digital readout never asks anything of you. It is just there, glanced at, gone. Dialling 123 is a small commitment. You decide the time matters enough to ring for it, you wait through the preamble, you listen for three beeps and align your watch to the third one. That ritual produces a different relationship to the second than a screen ever does. Younger people mostly do not know what 123 is for. They will glance at a phone and laugh, in the way people laugh at the inexplicable. The laugh is fine. It does not change the calls.

There is something specific about the word stroke as well. The clock does not say tone. It says stroke, which is the word a grandfather clock makes when it announces an hour, the word a public bell uses when the village still has one. The speaking clock kept the vocabulary of the church clock and the parlour mantel, and ported them into the copper wires of a telephone exchange in 1936, and from there into BT's millisecond-accurate reference oscillator in 2026. The technology has been replaced four times. The word has not.

That is the part I keep turning over. We have a service that does nothing a wristwatch cannot do. It charges thirty-one pence a call. It is voiced by a woman in Brighton who recorded her lines in 2007. And tomorrow morning, when the clocks have been changed an hour or so before anyone gets up, twelve million people across a year will pick up landlines they barely use for anything else, and listen politely until the third beep, and put the phone down satisfied. The line they rang is older than nearly all of them. The voice on it is going nowhere.

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Cheaper Hardware Won

For most of the early 1980s, if you wanted to run serious Lisp, you bought a machine designed to run nothing else. Symbolics in Cambridge, Lisp Machines Inc. with its CADR-derived workstations, Xerox with the Dandelion and Daybreak, Texas Instruments with the Explorer. Each box was a small architectural argument: stack hardware, tagged memory, a microcoded instruction set tuned to the cost profile of a language with garbage collection and dynamic typing. The machines ran the Genera environment or its cousins, which many people who used them still describe as the most coherent development experience they ever had. A CADR sold for around fifty thousand dollars, an LM-2 closer to seventy, in the money of the time.

The business case held as long as the alternative was a conventional minicomputer struggling to execute the same code through a software interpreter. By 1987 that case was gone. Sun's workstations, particularly the Sun-3 line, were running compiled Common Lisp from Lucid and Franz on commodity Motorola silicon at prices a research lab could put on a regular procurement form. An Apple Mac II with an MicroExplorer board sat in the same office. The premium for going specialist had become a tax, not an investment.

What turned a slow erosion into a market collapse was DARPA. The Strategic Computing Initiative, launched in 1983, had been the quiet backbone of the Lisp machine business. Many Symbolics customers were ultimately spending federal AI grant money. When funding for the program contracted in 1987 as the Reagan-era defence build-up cooled, that procurement channel narrowed in the same fiscal year that commercial buyers were already pulling back. Symbolics's revenue did not decline gracefully; it fell off a cliff.

Underneath the hardware story was a software story everyone in the industry could already feel. The expert systems boom that had justified the optimism, XCON at DEC, the Authorizer's Assistant on American Express phones, MYCIN in research, was running into the qualification problem. Rules did not generalise. Updates required the original knowledge engineer. Maintenance costs in year three or four often exceeded the system's payback. By 1988 corporate buyers had concluded that what they had been sold as artificial intelligence was, mostly, a brittle and expensive form of structured programming.

LMI went bankrupt before its K-machine reached customers. Symbolics restructured repeatedly through the early 1990s and emerged as a software company selling Open Genera into a niche that has never quite closed. Xerox quietly folded the AI workstation work back into the rest of PARC. The hackers dispersed into Common Lisp standardisation, into the early internet companies, into academia. The hardware did not die for technical reasons. It died because the market discovered it could buy ninety percent of the experience for ten percent of the money, and ninety percent was enough.

The lesson was not new even in 1987. It was the same lesson Pierce's panel had delivered about machine translation twenty-one years earlier: a field can be made to look unviable simply by removing the subsidy that was holding it up. The funders left, and the rest followed. Anyone working on AI infrastructure in 2026 should at least know the shape of the room they are standing in.

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Compute Goes to Coding

OpenAI is shutting Sora down. The web app and the iOS app close on April 26, 2026, the API follows on September 24, and after that user content gets permanently deleted. This is not the quiet sunset of a side project. Sora was the public face of OpenAI's creative play, the model Disney signed a partnership around, the demo that anchored earnings narratives whenever someone asked what came after text.

OpenAI's stated reason in the help-centre notice is simply that it wants to funnel compute toward coding tools and enterprise customers. Translating: the H100s and B200s that have been rendering sixty-second clips of impossibly detailed dolphins are being pulled off that workload and assigned to whatever the consolidated ChatGPT super-app needs next. The research itself continues, repositioned as a world-models programme aimed at "automating the physical economy", a phrase that does a lot of work to make a euthanasia look like a graduation.

Disney has terminated its partnership. That is the cleaner data point. Whatever the public renderings looked like, the studio with the most to gain from licensed generative video has decided the technology is not where it needs to be, or not on terms it can sign. A studio walking away from a free pilot is louder than any benchmark.

I keep coming back to what this admits about the economics. For a while the standard story about generative video was that compute would get cheaper, models would get better, and at some inflection point the per-second cost of a Sora clip would slide under the per-second cost of a junior motion designer. That story is now visibly losing to a different one, in which coding agents and enterprise SaaS deliver more revenue per GPU-hour than entertainment ever will. OpenAI has done the arithmetic, and the arithmetic says video is a hobby it cannot afford while it is also paying Microsoft and burning through Stargate construction.

It is interesting to read this against Anthropic's announcement last week of nine creative-software connectors: Photoshop, Premiere, Ableton, Blender. Anthropic is not trying to be the studio. It is trying to be the assistant inside the studio that already exists. OpenAI built a studio and could not pay the electricity bill. The two strategies look like they were drawn from the same brief and answered with opposite philosophies, and right now Anthropic's answer is the one that scales without a Disney deal.

There is a familiar pattern here too, of OpenAI shipping things and watching them land softer than expected. Sora arrived with a consumer app whose novelty wore off in weeks, and the broader product never broke containment with general audiences. By the time other news cycles took the oxygen, the case for keeping the lights on was hard to make to a board counting GPU-hours.

What stays with me is the deletion clause. Users have until the cutoff to export their generations, after which OpenAI promises to remove the data from its servers. A whole archive of synthetic minutes, every prompt that was a hopeful sentence and every output that was a slightly wrong dream, gets unmade on a schedule. The compute moves on to write Python. The footage does not get a museum.

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Green Against Red

Oscar de la Renta's Fall/Winter 1991 show sits in a strange part of the decade, before minimalism had fully cleaned the room and after eighties excess had started to look self-conscious. You can feel that threshold in the footage. The clothes still believe in finish, in a proper entrance, in a hat that has no intention of apologising for being a hat. But the line is sharper than the word elegance usually implies.

TIME's retrospective note on the collection puts de la Renta's formula as French elegance, American ease, and Latin flair. Fair enough, though the phrase makes the clothes sound more polite than they are. The Fall/Winter 1991 show had tartan, military references, scarves, road-map motifs, and draping, all the things that can tip into decorative comfort if the designer lets them. Oscar mostly doesn't. He keeps the surfaces rich and the silhouettes composed, then lets colour do the less civilised work.

This green coat is the argument in its simplest form. The cut is almost severe: high collar, broad clean panels, double-breasted buttons placed low enough to make the torso feel elongated rather than boxed in. Then the colour arrives, not tasteful olive, not bottle green, but a flat, saturated green that behaves like stage lighting. Behind it, the red look passing out of focus turns the photograph into a colour field before it becomes a fashion image.

That is why the hat matters. Without it, the coat could drift into beautiful costume. With it, the look becomes architectural, a column with a face under the roofline. De la Renta was never a minimalist in the Helmut Lang sense, but here he understands the same lesson from the opposite direction: remove enough fuss and one decision starts to ring. The whole look works because it understands how much pressure one clear colour can carry.

The early nineties are easy to retell as a clean break: power dressing dies, deconstruction arrives, minimalism wins, everyone discovers greige. That version is tidy and mostly false. The season was messier than that. Valentino was still making continuity feel like a discipline, Claude Montana was trying to carry the shoulder into a new decade, Alaia was about to run Tati gingham through couture technique, and de la Renta was showing clothes that treated polish as a live position rather than a nostalgic one.

Watching the Fall 1991 runway now, what strikes me is not how dated it looks. Some of it does, of course. Almost everything from 1991 does if you stare at the styling long enough. What survives is the confidence of a designer who knew exactly where theatricality ended and authority began. The show gives you military lines without turning into uniform, scarves without souvenir softness, colour without coyness. It is grand, but not vague.

The green coat holds because it doesn't ask to be liked. It asks to be seen cleanly, against red, against black, against the version of 1991 that keeps trying to simplify itself after the fact.

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Cloying Was the Brief

For ten years before March 1995, Rei Kawakubo's reputation was fixed. Black, frayed, asymmetric, holes where holes don't belong. Hiroshima chic, the press called it, with the casualness of people who had not yet noticed the term was offensive. Then she sent models down a Paris runway in pink tulle, hoopskirts, Peter Pan collars, and pastel chiffon, and called the collection Sweeter Than Sweet.

Kawakubo herself was unusually plain about the intent. She told Vogue she wanted to express "extreme sweetness, a sweetness that is almost overpowering." Not a concession to the customer. Not a softening of her line. An experiment in what happens when you push prettiness past the point where it stays pretty.

The runway report from the time makes this clear once you read past the materials. There were capes and coats whose construction restrained the models' arms, hampering upper-body movement. The hoopskirts held the wearer at a fixed distance from anything nearby. What looked at first glance like a fairy tale was, on inspection, a series of garments that constrained the body inside them.

This is the part the photographs from the time tend to flatten. Irving Penn shot the finale looks for Vogue's October 1995 issue, and his lighting and pose direction made the dresses read as romantic and still. Stillness in Penn's frame was a compositional choice. Stillness in the original collection was structural, imposed by the clothes themselves.

I keep thinking about the relationship between this show and the 1997 collection that everyone remembers, the lumps-and-bumps "Body Meets Dress, Dress Meets Body" with the padded protrusions on the hips, shoulders, and back. Sweeter Than Sweet came two years earlier and worked the opposite way. Instead of adding bulges to the body, it built a sweet exterior and locked the body inside it. Both collections asked what a dress was for. The 1997 one is louder about the question. The 1995 one is, if you actually look, the trickier of the two.

The reception in 1995 was confused, and by Kawakubo standards that was a success. Critics who had spent a decade lecturing on deconstruction did not know whether to read a pink coat as betrayal or as another kind of provocation. Some thought she had finally given in. Some thought she was satirising the houses that had spent the decade copying her without understanding her. Both readings missed the point, which was simply that sweetness was a material she had not yet pushed to its limit, and now she was pushing it.

The collection didn't vanish. When Andrew Bolton curated Rei Kawakubo / Comme des Garçons: Art of the In-Between at the Met Costume Institute in 2017, Sweeter Than Sweet was one of the collections the show drew on to make its case about Kawakubo's career, organised by Bolton around nine "in-betweenness" dualities. The garments themselves continued to circulate. A pink two-dimensional coat from the collection sold at Piasa in Paris for around $7,600, which by archival CDG standards is the price of being in the canon.

The thing nobody really argues about, thirty years on, is whether the constraint was the joke or the work. The hoopskirts and the tulle did the obvious work. The capes that pinned the models' arms did the real work. Sweeter Than Sweet is one of the few cases in 90s fashion where you can see the designer conducting an experiment on the audience in real time, with every garment a measurement.

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