Barbara Varvart -

"The moment you explain yourself, you're a product," she says. "I wanted to be a person." Born in post-Soviet Tbilisi in 1996, Varvart grew up during the Rose Revolution's aftermath. Her mother was a chemist; her father, a jazz pianist who left when she was seven. "Chaos was the wallpaper," she says. "But chaos makes you watchful."

Now, whispers circulate about her directorial debut—a short film shot entirely on a 1970s Soviet camera, starring her 74-year-old grandmother. No release date. No trailer. "It will come when it's ripe," Varvart says, smiling for the first time. The Takeaway In a culture addicted to the new, Barbara Varvart offers the old: patience. She moves like water through cracks, refusing to be contained by trends, timelines, or typecasting. She is not a comeback story. She never left. barbara varvart

That watchfulness became her weapon. Discovered at 16 by a scout while buying bread, she was initially cast as a street-casting anomaly. But designers quickly realized she wasn't an accident—she was a curator. Demna Gvasalia once said, "Barbara doesn't wear clothes. She interrogates them." "The moment you explain yourself, you're a product,"

During that year away, she published a slim volume of poems— The Shoulder's Memory —in her native Georgian, with no English translation planned. A leaked PDF circulated among fashion editors like samizdat. One poem read: "The camera loves hunger / but I am done being eaten." She came back this past September, not with a campaign, but as a guest curator for Dover Street Market's Tokyo outpost. She selected 13 unknown Georgian designers, installed a single bench in the middle of the store, and sat there for three hours each day, speaking only when spoken to. "Chaos was the wallpaper," she says