NEW YORK – Shoes are having a 21st-century moment as theyve pushed from mere accessory to the center of the fashion stage.
Sexuality, social status, fashion IQ: The reasons for our shoe obsession are many, but one things for sure: more, and more avant-garde, designers are taking on the feet.
There has been a big emphasis on high designer shoes in the past 10 to 12 years, so more women are certainly willing to spend more money on high-end shoes, but theres also been a real focus on shoes as art pieces, said Colleen Hill, assistant curator of accessories for The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology.
The museum went directly to the source – a Whos Who of shoe designers and some high-profile collectors – for Shoe Obsession, an exhibition that runs through April 13.
Outlandish beer heiress Daphne Guinness lent some of her favorites. So did jewelry designer Lynn Ban, who owns about 800 pairs and says, Ive worn them all, at least once.
The exhibition shows off 153 specimens, mostly from this century, including Bans silver-platform Chanels with handguns for heels. (They came with a warning against packing them in carry-on luggage when flying.) From the eerie, bone-white Exoskeleton made of resin and produced through 3-D digital printing by Janina Alleyne to the disco-ballish silver sparklers without a heel by Giuseppe Zanotti (also Bans); nary a style is left unrepresented by FIT.
Hill and Valerie Steele, director and chief curator of the museum, have co-written a book, Shoe Obsession, to accompany the exhibit. During a recent walk-through, the two spoke of designer shoes as the new millenniums It bag, which has not gone unnoticed by major department stores.
The flagship Macys in Manhattan expanded floor space for shoes by 10 percent, boasting 250,000 pairs. Saks Fifth Avenue enlarged shoe departments in about a dozen stores around the country, with the Manhattan stores department 40 percent larger, spanning the entire eighth floor and hosting the first Louis Vuitton shoe shop within a department store.
Shoes by established designers and design houses – Manolo Blahnik, Salvatore Ferragamo, Roger Vivier, Chanel, Prada, Christian Louboutin – remain popular but quirky stars have arisen as quickly as heels have gone so high that 4 inches is the new low, the two curators said.
The new design generation? Modernists Kei Kagami, with art pieces that take on an almost orthopedic terror, and Noritaka Tatehana, working in stamped leather, spikes and tall toe platforms absent a heel, stand out in a strong contingent from Japan.
Brazilian shoe designer Alexandre Birman lent the exhibit three pairs done in painted reptile skin.
Shoes have a psychological, sociocultural and seductive significance to our culture, from the Hollywood celebrity to the everyday woman, which goes beyond a materialistic obsession, he said in an email.
Height, Steele said, has reached this great moment, when compared to a decade ago. Weve gone about as high as most people can walk in shoes, unless youre Lady Gaga. Thats about six inches, but some people can do higher.
While a high toe platform to match rear height remains popular, with Ban and millions of other fashionistas, were starting to see a new trend toward what people are calling sexy shoes, by which they mean single-sole shoes instead of a platform, so I think that implies that the heel will get a little bit less vertiginous, and instead the emphasis will be on interesting materials and decoration, and different shoe shapes, Steele said.
Theres no way to categorize popularity in shoes today. Theres a range of heights, shapes and embellishments – feathers, crystals, beads, spikes, human hair made to look like the tails of ponies, molded and painted resins, painted python. All are included in the exhibition.
Linda Wells, editor in chief of Allure magazine, said in a New York Fashion Week interview that shoe trends are like fashion trends in general – you can find whatever you want: pointy toes, stiletto heels, high platforms, fancy flats, more masculine shapes.
Everyone likes buying shoes. You dont have to take your clothes off or be a model size to wear them, Wells said.