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FW25: The Portal  

FW25: The Portal                                              

Gabriel Jeroschewitz

Feb 13, 2025

Of all the places Id expected to find myself on a Saturday evening, standing in the middle of a former industrial warehouse in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, while humanoid AI attendants dressed like extras from Blade Runner circled a disconcertingly glamorous woman, was not one of them. But there I was, pressed shoulder to shoulder with Manhattans finest—critics, influencers, museum curators, that guy who invented some app everyone deleted after two weeks—all with wine glasses in hand, staring at the curious spectacle unfolding before us.

This was FW25: The Portal, Alexis Bittars bold debut into the theatre of New York Fashion Week. It had been hyped mercilessly on Instagram for months: A performance to bend time, blur perception, and shatter convention.” The enigmatic nature of this description left us all in a state of bewilderment, and from the murmured conversations around me, most of the crowd was as baffled as I was, yet undeniably intrigued by the mystery unfolding before us.

Is it…art?” someone whispered behind me.

No, its a jewelry line,” their equally mystified companion replied. I think.” The uncertainty in their voices mirrored the confusion that seemed to be a shared experience among the audience.

The lights dimmed, and a hush settled over the room. A spotlight blinked on, illuminating the central setup—a vintage vanity table, ornate and gold like it had been plucked from the set of Dynasty. But where the mirror should have been, there was an oval-shaped screen, rippling like disturbed water. The woman seated at the vanity was a vision. She had the kind of presence that made you feel inadequate just by existing in the same room. Her hair was a sleek, silver waterfall, and she wore shimmering gold ornaments—bracelets, earrings, necklaces—all from Alexiss new collection. Draped over her was an iridescent cape with a strange, otherworldly texture that I could only describe as space couture.”

But it was her expression that hooked me. She wasnt smiling. She didnt even look particularly interested. Instead, she exuded a kind of serene detachment, a mysterious aura that made her seem both above and entirely removed from the chaos of the crowd gawking at her.

Thats when the robots arrived.

Calling them robots feels reductive. These were humanoid AI attendants, and they moved with an unsettling grace that was neither entirely human nor fully robotic. Their silicone-coated faces were eerily flawless—no pores, no expression, just a bland neutrality that made my skin crawl. Each was clad in a tailored suit with subtle iridescent accents as if they were part of Bittars futuristic vision.

The attendants began performing tasks around the woman: one gently brushed her hair, another polished her jewelry with exaggerated reverence, while a third refilled her invisible teacup because, of course, this strange future dystopia involved tea. It was done with the precision of choreographed theatre, their movements so fluid they seemed to glide rather than step.

Above the vanity, the screen portal shimmered to life, displaying fragmented radio signals—numbers, voices, snippets of songs. The sound wasnt clear; it was more of an atmospheric hum, like a distant station you couldnt entirely tune into. The woman glanced toward the portal and tilted her head slightly as if contemplating it. Then she reached out a hand, her fingers brushing the glassy surface of the screen.

Was she looking into the past? The future? Was this supposed to mean something?

I turned to the fashion editor standing next to me. Do you know whats going on?”

She shrugged. Its about ageism,” she said knowingly, sipping her wine. Or possibly technology? Whatever, its chic.”

The atmosphere in the room shifted as the performance continued. The air felt heavy with meaning, but it was meaning none of us could decipher. My attention was drawn back to the woman. She remained impossibly composed as the humanoid attendants swirled around her like moths to a flame. She exuded a quiet confidence that made it clear that she didnt need anyone—not the crowd gasping at her jewelry or the soulless attendants doting on her.

It was both inspiring and, frankly, a little intimidating.

What do you think shes thinking about?” someone whispered to their date.

Probably whether or not her Ubers arrived yet,” the date replied.

And yet, there was something undeniably poignant about the tableau. The woman was caught between two eras, surrounded by trappings of old-world wealth and futuristic technology. The jewelry she wore—pieces inspired equally by the chunky gold of the ’80s and the sleek industrial minimalism of imagined futures—seemed to represent that, too. It was as if the entire performance was a meditation on identity: what it means to belong to a time and what happens when you dont.

My phone vibrated with a text from my friend Tamara, who had skipped the event in favour of Netflix and pyjamas: Hows it going? Are you still staring at shiny things?”

Tamara had once joked that fashion was just expensive existentialism,” and for the first time, I thought she might be right.

As the performance peaked, the woman stood from her vanity. The humanoid attendants paused, their heads tilting in eerie unison as if awaiting her command. She clicked her golden stiletto heels—another exquisite Bittar design—against the floor and turned her back to the vanity, facing the crowd for the first time.

She looked at us—not with warmth, but with a steady, appraising gaze that made us all feel highly seen, and not necessarily in a good way.

I,” she declared in a voice smooth as velvet and deceptively commanding, am not your reflection.”

The room was dead silent. Somewhere in the back, someone audibly dropped their wine glass.

She turned back to the portal, her figure silhouetted against the shifting waves of light and sound on the screen. Extending a single hand, she pressed her palm flat against it. There was a flash—a brief, blinding burst of light—and then she disappeared, leaving us all in shock.

I blinked. The humanoid attendants bowed in unison, their movements perfectly synchronized, before gliding sensibly offstage. The crowd erupted into applause.

What…” I started, but the words failed me. Everyone else seemed equally confounded, though that didnt stop the praise from flowing.

Brilliant,” declared a man in a velvet blazer.

A masterpiece,” agreed his equally bejewelled companion.

This is going to look amazing on TikTok,” someone near the front added as they uploaded their video.

The evening concluded with a press conference-slash cocktail party, at which Alexis Bittar addressed the crowd in a metallic blazer reminiscent of David Bowie in his heyday.

Fashion,” he said with a mischievous smile, is about raising questions, not answering them.”

We all nodded in solemn agreement as if that explained anything.

Later, as I walked out into the crisp Brooklyn night, I thought about the woman at the vanity. Was her solitude by design, or had technology stripped her of something essential? Was technology her jailer or her liberator?

But mostly, I wondered if Alexis would ever create a handbag that could hold more than lipstick and a single Tic Tac.

For now, though, that was a question for 2050.

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