A collaboration collection with M.A.C means avant-garde designer Gareth Pugh's work is a little more accessible for the masses.
She's very beautiful. But she looks like she might kill you," says Gareth Pugh of model Alla Kostromichova, the lovely - if admittedly somewhat intimidating - face of his new limited-edition line of makeup and accessories, designed in collaboration with M.A.C. And that just about sums up not only the designer's aesthetic more broadly, but also this latest venture.
On a table in front of us, all packaged in fiercely heavyweight, high-shine geometric black, is a duo-chromatic nail polish that flashes from emerald to amethyst; a powder designed to suit all skin colours and render the complexion entirely - almost a touch morbidly? - matt; and lip gloss that is relatively discreet when worn alone but high-impact when layered over dark and distressed shades of lipstick. Then there are probably the most enormous false eyelashes the world has ever seen - they're called Flight Lashes, presumably because should they catch the breeze their wearer might inadvertently take to the skies in them, which would be good.
"I got the biggest ones M.A.C does and chopped them up, basically," Pugh laughs. "When you put them on top and bottom they work really well. They look like horse blinkers." Speaking more generally, he says of the origins of the collection in question: "M.A.C asked me to send them things that I like - colours and textures. I went through my studio and I never throw anything away so I've got all this stuff." It almost goes without saying that said "stuff" is more than averagely interesting. "There's a butterfly ring, which is how we came up with the iridescent thing. There was a haematite rock that I'd picked up in Evolution in New York. I can't resist that place. It's full of dead things and crystals. I sent M.A.C the feathered head-dresses from my spring/summer 2010 show - light grey feathers, that's how we came up with that colour. It's all come from the same place so it works as a collection, I think. It tells a story."
And that story brings together what Pugh describes as "two opposing elements that can be merged and mixed. You've got a very dark, quite full-on element, and then there's an ethereal, silvery grey side to the collection." A promotional film has been shot with Kostromichova playing two different characters. "It's a bit like a fight. There's friction there," Pugh says. Directed by Ruth Hogben, styled by Katie Shillingford, with makeup directed by Val Garland for M.A.C and music by Matthew Stone, the end result, which will be screened in-store alongside the product, is a group effort between people who have worked together often. And, like all the best link-ups, the relationship between Pugh and M.A.C has also developed over an extended period of time.