Montreal is one of the fashion capitals of North America. New York and LA are important, but Montreal is growing rapidly as a center of innovation. A few months back, my friend Raina, who studied fashion at a local design school, launched her own fashion line, and as her final exam for the design school, staged a fashion show in the lobby of a downtown office building. She and her peers showed five to six looks from their transition spring-summer lines. I jumped at the opportunity to go (and proceeds went to the FARHA foundation)--because when else would I get to go to a fashion show? I reveled in the fashion in Milan when I lived there, but never went to a catwalk.
So, when Raina said that she was going to take a group through the Museum of Fine Art's special exhibit on Yves Saint Laurent, I knew it would be an awesome opportunity. She'd have personal insight, having had an internship with a pretty big Quebecois designer, designing herself, and having toured the exhibit days prior. YSL was a name I'd heard a lot, especially since working at Nordstrom, but didn't know much about the guy.
1. He was born in Algeria. As a homosexual, he was abused during his mandatory military conscription. He was sent to a mental hospital and was given shock therapy to try and "cure" him of his homosexuality. This caused him tons of emotional turmoil (duh), and he abused drugs and alcohol the rest of his life, which sometimes debilitated him from coming onstage at the end of fashion shows. At the end of his life, he became sober.
2. He was the first designer to incorporate looks from other cultures into the fashion world.
3. He was the first designer to design pants for women, and to show them on the runway (wow, I'm thankful he did!).
4. He was the first designer to have african models up on the runway.
5. He changed fashion dramatically by having it reflect what happened on the street, rather than the masses following elitist fashionistas. He was one of the first to be inspired by sailors and soldiers and painters, incorporating the nautical look into fashion, for instance.
6. He came up with the peacoat for women. (Thanks again, Yves!)
There's tons of other firsts that he did. The exhibit, which is only traveling to a few cities, has hundreds of fashions that he designed. It was separated by themes, and every room was better than the last. I loved looking at all the detail of his designs, and was impressed by how ridiculously timeless many of his designs were. They even set up a catwalk.

I didn't try my hand at it, since it was a ramp and all. My favorite room was the tongue-in-cheek art room. Everyone questions whether fashion is art or not. YSL took famous works of art and made clothing pieces as living replicas of them. His Mondrian-style mod dresses were so simple, with the contrast of black and white and right angles, plus a square of a primary color here or there. His Van Gogh iris jacket--completely covered in beads--was worth $100,000 on its own. He loved Matisse and Picasso and Brecht as well and had many pieces (even some with beaded doves holding them together) based on their works.
Right after the exhibit, we went to the Montreal Festival of Fashion and Design, where they were having a tribute fashion show to YSL. That was the plan even a year ago, and ironically enough, he had passed away the same week as the festival. Quebec designers came up with designs inspired by YSL's vision. Since we had seen YSL stuff just minutes before, it was especially striking how well the designers did.
So basically, I knew next to nothing about Yves Saint Laurent when I started the evening. Then I learned a ton and got to understand how revolutionary his work was. And yes, I do think it is art.

I love this city.