Looking Back at Vivienne Westwood’s Personal Style

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The many styles of Vivienne Westwood.Collage by David Vo. Photos, from left: David Dagley / Shutterstock; Dave Benett / Getty Images; Marcio Madeira; Martin Keene - PA Images via Getty Images; Courtesy of Vivienne Westwood

In the course of her long career, Dame Vivienne Westwood gifted us not only with unforgettable runway experiences (like Naomi Campbell’s unplanned tumble during the fall 1993 show) but a great number of personal style moments as well.

The mother of punk, Westwood had little patience for propriety or prudery, as evidenced by a famous picture in which she’s joined by Chrissie Hynde and shopgirl Jordan. All are standing with their backs to the camera, their bottoms painted with letters spelling out the name of the designer’s boutique, which is 1977, was called Sex. Fast forward 43 years and there’s Westwood showing lots of leg and exposing her pull-up stockings, this time without garters, in the spring 2021 lookbook for the Andreas Kronthaler for Vivienne Westwood collection.

These were conscious exposures; the designer’s most infamous reveal, in contrast, was presumably unplanned and took place in 1992 when Westwood went to Buckingham Palace to receive her OBE. She was dressed in a New Look-style suit, and when she took a turn for the cameras and the full skirt went flying, it became evident that she’d left her knickers at home.

Westwood’s style was not solely defined by exhibitionism, but she did wear her political agenda on her sleeve. An ardent activist, the designer took the slogan idea and went wild with it: printing, knitting, and pinning manifestos on garments and accessories that function like pliable and portable sandwich boards.

An avid scholar of fashion history, with a particular fondness for the 18th century, Westwood attended galas in full-skirted gowns that could have walked out of the paintings of Francois Boucher or Franz Xavier Winterhalter. She would wrap such a dress with a shawl of her proprietary tartan; for the “Anglomania” exhibition at the Costume Institute in 2006, she was draped in the Union Jack and sported a dress of her own creation. Unlike many designers who took their bows in jeans and T-shirts, Westwood wore her own clothes on the catwalk and IRL.

Over the course of her career, Westwood became a sort of avatar of herself. (It’s an idea that she plays with by appearing in her own press materials.) With Westwood, what you saw was what you got—pure fashion and signature style.

Punk

With Sid Vicious, 1976Photo: Ian Dickson / Redferns
With Chrissie Hynde and Jordan and at her boutique, called Sex, 1976Photo: David Dagley / Shutterstock
At the close of her spring 2008 collection, 2007Photo: Victor Virgile / Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Sara Stockbridge in Vivienne Westwood at the Love Ball 2 AIDS Benefit, 1991Photo: Ron Galella, Ltd. / Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
Backstage, 1990Photo: News Group / Shutterstock

Provocateur

On the runway, 2005 Photo: Victor Virgile / Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
With Chrissie Hynde and Jordan, 1976Photo: David Dagley / Shutterstock
Taking a bow, 2006Photo: Marcio Madeira
Protesting in London, 2018Photo: Ki Price / Getty Images

New Romantic

At the opening of “Vivienne Westwood: A Retrospective” at the Victoria and Albert, 2004Photo: Mike Marsland / WireImage
Celebrating 100 years of the Louis Vuitton monogram, 1995Photo: Eric Robert / Sygma via Getty Images
At the Victoria and Albert museum, 1998Photo: Shutterstock
At the opening of “The Golden Age of Couture,” 2007Photo: Dave M. Benett / Getty Images
At the Fashion Group International’s Night of Stars gala, 1996Photo: Ron Galella, Ltd. / Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images
The designer and models at London Fashion Week, 1991Photo: Martyn Hayhow / AP / Shutterstock
With Andreas Kronthaler at the Sex and the City world premiere, 2008Photo: Eamonn McCormack / WireImage
Vivienne Westwood, fall 1994 ready-to-wearPhoto: Condé Nast Archive
With Naomi Campbell at the Designer of the Year awards, 1993Photo: Dave Benett / Getty Images
A night on the town, circa 1992Photo: Shutterstock

Royalist

Trying her crown on for size, 1987Photo: Pictorial Press Ltd / Alamy Stock Photo
At the Costume Institute’s “Anglomania” exhibition, 2006Photo: Rabbani and Solimene Photography / WireImage
Vivienne Westwood, 1977Photo: Elisa Leonelli / Shutterstock
After receiving her ensignia from the Prince of Wales, 2006Photo: Shutterstock
On the day she received her OBE, 1992Photo: Martin Keene - PA Images via Getty Images

Lover, Mother

With Malcolm McLaren, 1981Photo: Richard Young / Shutterstock
With her sons Joseph Corre, left, and Ben Westwood, 1992Photo: John Minihan / ANL / Shutterstock
With Andreas Kronthaler at Royal Ascot, 1995Photo: Mike Hollist / ANL / Shutterstock

Pedaler

In London, 2009Photo: Neil Mockford / Getty Images
In London, 2009Photo: Dave M. Benett / Getty Images
Andreas Kronthaler for Vivienne Westwood, spring 2021 ready-to-wearPhoto: Courtesy of Vivienne Westwood
In London, 2016Photo: Chris Ratcliffe / AFP via Getty Images

Icon

Vaquera, fall 2018 ready-to-wear

Photo: Luca Tombolini / Indigital.tv
With Model Holly Wilcox in London, 1991Photo: Alex Lentati / ANL / Shutterstock
Taking a bow, 2016Photo: Victor Boyko / Getty Images

Andreas Kronthaler for Vivienne Westwood, fall 2017 ready-to-wear

Photo: Luca Tombolini / Indigital.tv

Andreas Kronthaler for Vivienne Westwood, spring 2021 ready-to-wear

Photo: Courtesy of Vivienne Westwood

Andreas Kronthaler for Vivienne Westwood, fall 2021 ready-to-wear

Photo: Courtesy of Andreas Kronthaler