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FASHION

Fashion superstar Slimane to take over at Celine

Hedi Slimane, the designer who pioneered the skinny look at Dior and Saint Laurent, is to take over at Celine, the brand's owners said on Sunday.

Fashion superstar Slimane to take over at Celine
A 2012 photo of Hedi Slimane. PHOTO: MARTIN BUREAU / AFP
The 49-year-old French-born creator is one of fashion's biggest and most enigmatic names, and his future has been surrounded by speculation since he walked away from Saint Laurent last year.
 
The luxury giant LVMH, which owns Celine, has given Slimane complete control of the brand's images and creative side in order to sign him up — a concession which put him alongside Chanel's Karl Lagerfeld as one of the most powerful designers in fashion.
 
They are also letting him create a menswear line at the label, which up until now only made clothes for women.
 
Announcing the surprise appointment, Bernard Arnault, the owner of LVMH, said: “He is one of the most talented designers of our time.”
 
“Hedi will oversee and develop all creativity for both women's and men's fashion, but also for leather goods, accessories and fragrances,” he added.
 
Lagerfeld, who famously shed 41 kilos (90 pounds) in order to squeeze into Slimane's skinny jeans, was the first to cheer the news.
 
“I am enchanted, what a great choice,” he told Women's Wear Daily. “It will be great.”
 
Friend of the stars
 
Like Lagerfeld, Slimane is a renowned photographer, and he has spent the last few years living in Los Angeles, where he had moved his studio at the end of his reign at Saint Laurent.
 
The designer drew much of his inspiration from the LA rock scene, which he tirelessly documented with his photographs.
 
Intensely private, he nonetheless has struck up close friendships with many A-listers including pop star Lady Gaga.
 
AFP understands that he will continue to live in the city while he designs for Celine, and start work within 10 days.
 
Slimane borrowed many of the elements of his grungy, androgynous look from the world of rock, with his skinny style initially influenced by British indie bands like Franz Ferdinand and The Libertines.
 
The Libertines bohemian frontman Peter Doherty became a friend and muse, and figured prominently in his 2006 photo book, “London Birth of a Cult”.
 
'The Sultan of skinny'
 
Arnault said Slimane will use his “global vision and unique aesthetic virtuosity in further building an iconic French fashion house.”
 
“I am delighted to join Bernard Arnault in this all-embracing and fascinating mission for Celine,” Slimane said. “I greatly look forward to returning to the exciting world of fashion and the dynamism of the ateliers.”
 
Slimane will also be reunited at Celine with Sidney Toledano, one of fashion's most influential backroom figures. The pair were a formidable team at Dior where Slimane was a huge trendsetter until his departure in 2012.
 
Dubbed the “Sultan of skinny”, Slimane designed for the late rock star David Bowie, with his skinny silhouette dominating men's style for more than a decade.
 
He takes over at Celine from the highly-rated British designer Phoebe Philo who quit last month after a decade at the helm.
 
She had created a cult following at the label for her hip minimalist and very modernist style.
 
Philo had also lately embraced the oversized trend which Slimane is credited with kickstarting at Saint Laurent with his long gorilla-sleeved jackets.
 
Many had talked of Philo as a possible successor for Lagerfeld at Chanel, despite there being little sign that the 84-year old is ready to surrender his scissors.
 
While his designs have made big-name brands many millions, Slimane's origins are far from the bright lights. He was born in a working-class district of the French capital to a Tunisian father and Italian mother, who worked as a dressmaker.
 
He first wanted to be a journalist before slipping into fashion after he became an assistant to Jean-Jacques Picart, one of the founders of the haute couture house Christian Lacroix.
 
Celine, which has a turnover just shy of €1 billion euros, was founded by Celine Vipiana in Paris just after World War 2.
 
By AFP's Fiachra Gibbons

FASHION

Paris exhibition celebrates 100 years of French Vogue

A new exhibition in Paris will tell the story of 100 years of French Vogue - from the post-war 'New Look' of Christian Dior through the sexual liberation of the 1960s to the dangling-cigarette waifs of the 2000s.

French Vogue celebrates 100 years
French Vogue celebrates 100 years. Photo: Thomas Olva/AFP

But as well as celebrating the magazine’s storied history, the exhibit comes at a time of turbulence for the publication.

Just last month, it was confirmed that its editor of 10 years, Emmanuelle Alt, was out and wouldn’t be replaced.

She was not alone.

Looking to cut costs, owner Conde Nast International has axed editors across Europe over the past year, and put international Vogue editions under the direct control of global editorial director, Anna Wintour, in New York.

New York-based Anna Wintour now has overall control of French Vogue. Photo by Christophe ARCHAMBAULT / AFP

Like much of the media industry, Vogue is struggling with tumbling sales and ad revenue in the digital era.

But the latest twist is also part of the endless push and pull between New York and Paris going back to its early days.

“The whole history of French Vogue is one of back-and-forth with Conde Nast in New York – growing more independent for a while, then being reined back in,” said Sylvie Lecallier, curator of the new exhibition, “Vogue Paris 1920-2020″, which opened this weekend after a year’s delay due to the pandemic.

The Paris edition was often the loftier, more bohemian sibling to its more hard-nosed New York version.

But it was also the hotbed in which much of 20th century style and womenhood came to be defined.

“Paris was the place to hunt out talent and content and bring it to New York,” said Lecallier.

The exhibition charts the evolution from art deco drawings of the 1920s through the erotic image-making of photographers like Helmut Newton in the 1960s and 1970s.

Its last peak was under editor Carine Roitfeld in the 2000s, who brought back a provocative Gallic identity by ridding the newsroom of foreign staff and becoming a fashion icon in her own right.

Her successor, Alt, was a quieter presence, though she still oversaw key moments including its first transgender cover star, Brazilian Valentina Sampaio, in 2017.

But internet culture has created “a perfect storm” for Vogue, says media expert Douglas McCabe of Enders Analysis.

“The first 80 years of Vogue’s life, it had the market to itself, it was the bible for fashion,” McCabe told AFP.

“But online today, there are so many other ways to get your information. Influencers, Instagram, YouTube — everyone’s a threat.”

In a world where new fashion trends can blow up around the world in seconds, it has become much harder for a monthly magazine to set the pace.

“It’s not that they can’t survive for another 100 years — but they will be differently sized,” McCabe said.

Vogue has tried to branch out into different areas, including events.

“I used to work for a magazine, and today I work for a brand,” Alt said on the eve of French Vogue’s 1,000th issue in 2019.

But the big money was always in print, and Vogue Paris sales are dropping steadily from 98,345 in 2017 to 81,962 to 2020, according to data site ACPM.

It is perhaps unsurprising that the new top job in Paris, redefined as “head of editorial content”, went to Eugenie Trochu, who was key to building the magazine’s online presence.

She declared herself “thrilled to be part of Vogue’s international transformation”.

For the curator of the exhibition, it is ironic timing.

“We had no idea it would end like this when we started work on the exhibition,” said Lecallier.

“Who knows where it will go from here.”

The exhibition Vogue Paris 1920-2020 is at the Palais Galliera in Paris’ 16th arrondissement. The gallery is open 10am to 6pm Tuesday to Sunday and is closed on Mondays. Tickets for the exhibition are €14 (€12 for concessions and under 18s go free) and must be reserved online in advance. 

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