How does a collaboration with Moncler fit into your artistic direction, as you live in sunny California?
GL: In my last collections, I was already exploring the idea of sunny California crossed by autumn, of the experience you have at the beach in winter, when it's cold. It was an opportunity for me to discover the beach and Malibu in January... It's nice, in a different way, and it's a change from the idea of Los Angeles and the Pacific Coast under a bright sun. California goes much further than a Beach Boys song.
What characterizes me, and has been my upbringing, in terms of clothing is this idea that clothing, more than ever, opens the door to a new form of freedom of expression. Not from a creative point of view, but literally. The identity you want to assume, at any given moment... the way you want to be perceived by the world... All of that is defined by the clothes you wear on your back when you leave home. This idea is with me all the time.
My lifestyle in L.A., as well as my creative life, is filled with these experiments around representation through clothing. In California - which has outgrown its restrictive status as the epicenter of film, the limits and boundaries are what you define, and stop at your ability to go beyond them. Every character, every archetype you project yourself into, is a carte blanche to discover. In Los Angeles, people travel here and there, only to return, or they come from all over the world and end up in Los Angeles. It's a very futuristic melting pot, compared to New York, where the mix is more historical, in a way.
Working with Moncler has been great: I love incongruous mixes, I love combining characters and juxtaposing materials that shouldn't coexist. Putting together elements that shouldn't go together, and seeing them create a story, is an essential aspect of my work. It's my favorite thing to do in my collections.