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Why, that dress is just scrumptious

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Jean PAUL GAULTIER may be an aging enfant terrible of the Parisian fashion world, but he hasn’t lost his touch. When invited to stage a retrospective of his work at the Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Art in Paris, he declared that displaying clothes in museums is boring and proposed creating a bakery instead.

The result is “Pain Couture,” an exhibition of Gaultier-style garments and accessories made of traditional French bakery products, including baguettes, batards, buns and country loaves. The wardrobe on view reinterprets the designer’s classics: thongs, umbrellas, sailor blouses, kilts and, yes, Madonna’s corset dress.

All this food art may make viewers hungry, but Gaultier is prepared. He installed a working bakery on the lower floor to produce the couture and more easily edible fare. He also transformed a small gallery into a shop, where a Gaultier-attired sales force dispenses baguettes and pastries, signed by the artist. The idea is to nourish the body as well as the mind, Gaultier says.

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The exhibition, which runs through Oct. 10 in the foundation’s glass structure, designed by French architect Jean Nouvel, is a work in progress. Like any good fashion show, “Pain Couture” presents a changing array of enticements as objects in Gaultier’s “summer collection” are retired and replenished.

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Suzanne Muchnic

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