J0Y727 Mark Rothko, No. 301 (Reds and Violet over Red/Red and Blue over Red), 1959 - oil on canvass - On display in the MOCA Gallery, Los Angeles, California
Mark Rothko’s ‘No 301 (Reds and Violet over Red/Red and Blue over Red)’, 1959 © Alamy

The late art critic Tom Lubbock once wrote of the power of Rothko’s paintings, and why it was they worked. “Rothko made a real discovery when he found that, by using a very restricted language… of strong colour, blurry-edged and set in simple arrangements, he could stir in the viewer a powerful empathetic and emotional response. There is a technical term for this. It’s a familiar expression when we talk about popular music, but almost never used in connection with art: the hook… And the thing about hooks is that they have an almost neurological effect. They do something to you…A Rothko work is all hook, it’s designed as a simple, strong visual catch; one riff, writ very large.”

Lubbock was describing an artwork. Were fashion to have a hook, it would surely be an all-red loom. In the hands of a real couturier, the results can be captivating. And while red carries many meanings – from the adulterer’s scarlet to cardinal red – it’s most ravishing when it overwhelms. From the couture silhouette of a carmine ball-gown at Balenciaga, to the sweeping romantic reds at Valentino, and from the Chinese reds at Gucci to the tomato silks at Prada, this season delivered dozens of masterpieces. We were hooked.

Balenciaga
Balenciaga
Rodarte
Rodarte
Celine
Celine
Valentino
Valentino
Hermes
Hermes
Alexander McQueen
Alexander McQueen
Prada
Prada
Victoria Beckham
Victoria Beckham
Gucci
Gucci
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