In other interviews, you have explained that social media and sites such as Tumblr are frequent sources of inspiration for you. What role does technology currently play in your creative process?
I’m not afraid to try new things and incorporate them into my work. I’ve always done that, even in the MySpace Era. I remember doing casting on MySpace when I was working with Alexander McQueen, and we wanted to cast “cool kids,'' and I said, “let’s go to MySpace, find a cool band, and find the followers.” Today that feels so normal, but at that time, no one did that. For me, technology has always been very useful. So I did casting on MySpace, and then Facebook came along, and then Tumblr was an incredible source of inspiration. Social media completely opened up my possibilities of meeting people and collaborating, and I still use it. Now [I use] Instagram and TikTok. There’s always a diss at the beginning from the industry. Today it’s like, of course, you need to work with TikTokers, but there’s been a bit of elitism in the industry. They try not to open the door to everybody. I’m always the punk who says, “no, let’s work with the TikTokers, let’s work with the Instagrammers,” there was a time when no one wanted to touch influencers. When I did my first Mugler show, we opened up backstage with cameras everywhere, we worked with Twitter, and at that time, people were like, “why are you doing that? Why are you opening up your backstage, showing people?” It feels normal today, but at that time, it wasn’t. For me, social media [has always been] a tool to make [my work] more exciting and approachable. I have a love and hate relationship with it, of course, because sometimes it controls you. The Instagram feed is pretty amazing; when I am researching particular things, everything comes up because the algorithm knows what I like. [That being said,] I don’t forget to go off-grid [sometimes] because that time is just as necessary: reading a book, sketching, writing, copying magazines, researching, ripping things up, putting them on the wall, sometimes, for me, that’s more powerful because sometimes you make beautiful mistakes where I put two images together, and it creates a sparkle in my brain that can help me come up with other ideas. When you do that digitally, it’s useful and easy, but it's harder to create emotions. Social media is great, but the real world is also important. You have to research to know what’s around and what's happening in the world, but you have to have your own voice. You have to make your own decisions to create [new] things, and that's why I need my offline time: for meditation, for chilling, for dreaming, for daydreaming, reading books, writing, all of it.