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    Now reading: Matthieu Blazy’s debut Bottega Veneta campaign is a holiday for the mind

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    Matthieu Blazy’s debut Bottega Veneta campaign is a holiday for the mind

    Shot by a collective of young photographers, the house's AW22 image series is a celebration of craft, community and travel.

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    Back in late February,  during the AW22 show season, one of the most hotly anticipated fashion debuts of the year took place: yes, Matthieu Blazy’s very first collection at the helm of Bottega Veneta. A celebration of the Italian house’s proud heritage of exacting craftsmanship and eyewatering luxury, the close-to-70 look collection he presented at San Fedele in Milan – styled by i-D’s very own EIC Alastair McKimm – was an instant triumph. 

    Louche white ‘vests’ and blue ‘jeans’ were in fact cut from expertly dyed, butter-soft nappa, and glossy leather thigh-high boots and boxy bags were created using in the house’s emblematic intrecciato weave. Fronds of fringe bounced from beneath conical leather skirts in lemon and mauve, spaghetti-strapped slip dresses were covered in translucent paillettes, gleaming like mermaid’s scales, and generously tailored three-piece suits and overcoats came in mottled knits. The clothes we saw then were, put plainly, the clothes of dreams – the sort of clothes that inspire the mind to travel at first glance. Seeing them again today in Bottega Veneta’s new campaign, they’ll do just the same again. 

    Shot by a group of five young photographers – Malick Bodian, Solène Şahmaran Gün, Francois Halard, Sander Muylaert, and Louise and Maria Thornfeldt – Matthieu’s aim was to create a visual epic that paid tribute to the house’s roots. “Bottega Veneta was created by a collective of artisans,” he says via a release. “This is the history, and this is how we approached the campaign: together, with many different ways of seeing.”

    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign

    An equally crucial aspect of the house’s history is, of course, its core practicality. “Bottega Veneta is in essence pragmatic because it is a leather goods company,” Matthieu continues. “Because it specialises in bags it is about movement, of going somewhere; there is fundamentally an idea of craft in motion. It is style over fashion in its timelessness. That is part of its quiet power.”

    These values distil into a series of images that see the collection – worn by an intergenerational cast of models who walked the show, including Mariacarla Boscono, Anok Yai and Dara Gueye – travel from the concrete bowels of the show’s Milanese setting to the neon haze and pocked canopies of Horst, a techno-soundtracked cultural festival in Belgium, to the balmy climes of southern Italy. 

    A testament to the variety of perspectives that culminate in the final campaign, we flit between scenes of full looks caught in situ in real-world contexts, candid portraits, and still-life vignettes that bring the inimitable craft capabilities of Bottega Veneta’s ateliers to the fore with unscripted ease. The instantly emblematic, curved silhouette of a denim jacket is captured with the same attention-to-detail as the knotted leather netting covering a pair of clodhopper boots. The glisten of a comma-heeled patent stiletto is echoed in the gleam of sequins caught in a spotlight. It all sounds pretty magical, right? Well, scroll on for a look at one of the season’s stand-out campaigns – oh, and download the Bottega Veneta app for an interactive look at the whole thing! 

    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign
    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign
    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign
    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign
    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign
    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign
    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign
    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign
    Bottega Veneta AW22 campaign

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