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Anna Sui

 
(American designer)
  • Born: Dearborn Heights, Michigan, circa 1955.
  • Education: Studied at Parsons School of Design, New York, circa 1973-75.
  • Career: Stylist for photographer Steven Meisel and junior sportswear firms in New York, 1970s to 1981; sportswear designer, Simultanee, New York, 1981; also designed own line, from 1980; formed own company, New York, 1983; first runway show, 1991; added menswear line, opened in-store boutique Macy's, 1992; first freestanding store, SoHo, New York, 1992; opened shop in Hollywood, 1993-95; launched bridge line, SUI by Anna Sui, 1995; opened two boutiques in Japan, 1997; formed Anna Sui Shoes and added cosmetic line, 1997; introduced first fragrance, Magic Window, and opened Los Angeles store, 1999; introduced jean collection and second fragrance, Sui Dreams, 2000.
  • Exhibitions: Part of the Fashion in Motion series, Victoria & Albert Museum, London, 2000.
  • Awards: Perry Ellis award, 1993.
  • Address: 275 West 39th Street, New York, NY 10018, U.S.A.
  • Websites:www.annasui.com, www.annasuibeauty.com.

When Anna Sui started her own apparel company in 1980, her mission was to sell clothes to every rock 'n' roll store in the country. "It was right after the punk rock thing and I was so into that," said the designer, who has earned a reputation for bringing a designer's sensibility to wild-child, rocker clothes with a vintage spin.

One of three children of Chinese immigrants, Sui knew she wanted to be a clothing designer since she was a little girl growing up in Detroit in the late 1950s and 1960s. She came to New York to attend Parsons School of Design after graduating from high school in the early 1970s—an era whose music-inspired fashion scene, mix-it-up attitude, and free-spirited energy influenced Sui to a great degree. At Parsons, Sui met photographer Steven Meisel—her counterpart in styling ventures then and now.

Upon graduation from Parsons, Sui's first job was with the now defunct junior sportswear firm Bobbie Brooks, where she worked as a design assistant for about a year. After working for other firms over several years, Sui landed at Glenora, a firm the designer described as "very hip at the time." There she was able to experiment with her interest in clothing having a historical bent, made modern by mixing fresh colors and new shapes with vintage elements.

In 1980, prompted by friends and the praise she received as a stylist for Meisel's shoots for the Italian fashion magazine Lei, she started her own company. Greatly influenced by New York's punk scene of the 1970s, Sui's main focus was on selling her funky styles to music stores, though she continued as a stylist for Meisel. This changed around 1987, when the designer decided to "get serious about being a designer," as she recalled. She moved her line into the Annette B showroom, owned by Annette Breindel, a no-nonsense woman known for nurturing young designers. "Annette helped me enormously," said Sui. "She helped me build my dress business first because that's what she saw as a worthwhile area."

Building up her dress category is what allowed Sui to move her business out of her apartment and into a loft workspace in the garment district of New York. In 1991 Sui staged her first major fashion showing during New York Fashion Week. Her friends—supermodels Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, and Christy Turlington—walked Sui's runway for free, in exchange for clothes. Influenced by the shows of Thierry Mugler and Jean-Paul Gaultier, the designer created a showing that was as much about music and theater as about clothing. She soon reigned as the queen of fashion show extravaganzas.

Sui's designs mixed styles and time periods. She explained her creative focus in an interview with Maryann LoRusso in Footwear News in June 2000: "My designs are a combination of nostalgia and trendiness and rock 'n' roll and flea markets. And fantasy and dress-up. I'm a product of American pop culture, and my designs really show that." She is a fanatical researcher with an insatiable desire to learn. She draws inspiration from art exhibits, films, flea markets, museums, music, and street fashion. She does not simply pluck ideas from the past or another culture, but instead pulls together themes from many sources and seeks to relate them to what people are currently experiencing. She understands that her customers want to express themselves through their clothing and not feel as if they were wearing a costume.

Sui's business continues to expand; she has over 200 boutiques worldwide, in such locations as New York, Los Angeles, Tokyo, and Osaka, and her collections are sold in many major department and specialty stores. She formed Anna Sui Shoes in 1997, and her cosmetic and fragrance line is now a global brand. Even as her business branches out, Sui's commitment to fashion that is fun to wear hasn't diminished. Her 2001 collection included 59 feminine t-shirts decorated with printed designs, fabric flowers, lace, and sequins, and were as fashionable as they were affordable. Never interested in haute couture, Sui's work reflects her ongoing concern to "continue to make these clothes accessible to the people I want wearing them."

Publications

On Sui:

    Books
  • Steele, Valerie, Women of Fashion—Twentieth Century Designers, New York, 1991.
  • Stegemeyer, Anne, Who's Who in Fashion, Third Edition, New York, 1996.
  • Watson, Linda, Vogue Twentieth-Century Fashion: 100 Years of Style by Decade and Designer, London, 1999.
    Articles
  • Casadio, Mariuccia, "Anna Sui: Spectacular Ingredients," in Interview, July 1991.
  • Goodman, Wendy, "Anna Sui Suits Herself," in House & Garden, March 1992.
  • Allis, Tim, "The Sui Smell of Success," in People, 13 July 1992.
  • James, Laurie, "Sui Success," in Harper's Bazaar, September 1992.
  • Shiro, Anne-Marie, "On Opposite Sides of the Cutting Edge," in the New York Times, 6 November 1992.
  • "Designer Dish," in WWD, 29 March 1993.
  • "Anna Sui," in Current Biography, July 1993.
  • Shiro, Anne-Marie, "Anna Sui Pounds Out the Beat," in the New York Times, 5 November 1993.
  • Foley, Bridget, "Anna's Time," in W (New York), September 1994.
  • Spindler, Amy M., "Saluting—or Doing In—The Suburban Muse," in the New York Times, 4 November 1994.
  • DeCaro, Frank, "Hairy Situations and Hula Baloos: Anna Sui," in New York Newsday, 4 November 1994.
  • Spindler, Amy M., "Cool Rises to Intimidating Heights," in the New York Times, 7 April 1995.
  • "New York: Anna Sui," in WWD, 7 April 1995.
  • Sitbon, Martine, "Oui, Sui!" in Interview, May 1999.
  • Spindler, Amy M., "Behind the Seams," in the New York Times Magazine, 14 November 1999.
  • LoRusso, Maryann, "The Sui and Lowdown," in Footwear News, 26 June 2000.

— Mary Ellen Gordon; updated by Janette Goff Dixon

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Wikipedia: Anna Sui
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Anna Sui
Annasuioffice.jpg
Anna Sui at her New York City office
Born August 4, 1964 (1964-08-04) (age 45)
Detroit, Michigan
Nationality American
Education The New School (Parsons division)
Labels Anna Sui

Dolly Girl by Anna Sui

Anna Sui Mini
Awards Time Magazine- Top 5 Fashion Icons of the Decade

CFDA Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award

Bravo A-List Award

Anna Sui (traditional Chinese: 蕭志美, born August 4, 1964)[1] is an American fashion designer. Her brand retails globally in the Americas, Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Her clothing, fragrance, cosmetic, and accessories lines sell through her stores in over 50 countries and are also widely available in leading department stores worldwide.[2]

Contents

Early life

Sui was born on August 4, 1964 in Detroit, Michigan. She took an interest in fashion at a very young age and began clipping fashion-magazine pages to fill her famous Genius Files. These have served as an inspiration for her line throughout her career. After moving to New York, she attended The New School's famous art and design college, Parsons The New School for Design.

Career in Fashion

Jessica Stam at Anna Sui Show - September, 2008

After leaving The New School, she worked for a variety of junior sportswear companies. During this time she began designing clothing out of her apartment which retailed at locations such as Macy’s and Bloomingdale's. With the encouragement of friends Naomi Campbell and Linda Evangelista, Sui launched her first runway show in 1991.[3] "That those professional beauties were then at the height of their fame helped stoke the reception Sui got from buyers and the news media,"[4] and also insured industry embrace of a talented niche designer. Following this incredible reception she opened a retail location at 113 Greene Street in New York City's Soho District. This shop, with its lavender walls, red floors, antique black furniture, and signature dolly head mannequins has become a staple of SOHO fashion and synonymous with the Anna Sui brand. As described in a recent Time article, "The stores have come to emphasize the epitome of culture in a continually shifting fashion world."[5] Over her career, the Anna Sui brand has also grown internationally in the American, European, Asian and Middle Eastern markets. Her iconic fashion shows, with their much-anticipated rock music and background designs, routinely pack the Tent at Bryant Park during her prime time Wednesday slot at Fashion Week.

Achievements

Agyness Deyn at Anna Sui Show - February, 2008

She was called a designer who "never panders" by The New York Times, and named to Time Magazine's list of this decade's top five fashion icons. In 2009, Sui won the CFDA Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award (Council of Fashion Designers of America), which serves to honor contributions made to American fashion by outstanding individuals in the industry. Sui joins the ranks of Yves St Laurent, Giorgio Armani, Ralph Lauren, Diane von Furstenberg and Bill Blass, who are past recipients of the Lifetime Achievement Award.[6]

In 2008, she was profiled in Newsweek’s Women and Leadership, and was recognized for her contribution to fashion at the Bravo A-list Awards. Anna Sui continues to design and manufacture her signature collection in her New York City headquarters on Fashion Avenue. There she has ardently fought to keep the industry alive and has spearheaded a campaign to “Save the Garment Center,” which was highlighted during Fashion Week in September, 2008.[7]

Sui's designs attract many famous clients such as Paris Hilton, Blake Lively, Patricia Arquette, Mischa Barton, Christina Ricci, Cher, Naomi Campbell, Sofia Coppola, Lindsay Lohan, Hilary Duff, Maria Sharapova, Nicole Richie, Liv Tyler, Courtney Love, and James Iha.

In 2006, Fortune Magazine estimated the collective value of Anna Sui's fashion empire at over $400 million.[8]

Dolly Girl by Anna Sui

Sui launched her a more youthful version of her fashion line called Dolly Girl by Anna Sui in 2004. A children’s line known as Anna Sui Mini debuted in early 2009.

Other Lines

Anna Sui Shoes premiered on her runway for the fall collection. Manufactured in Venice, Italy, the shoe collection includes both day and evening styles, in velvet, silk, patent leather, snake and lizard skin, shearling and suede.

In 2009, Sui partnered with Target to produce a Gossip Girl inspired line combining Upper East Side style with a downtown edge. The limited edition collection was available for several weeks in September. Her design versatility was further displayed when Sui was contracted by Samsung Electronics Co. to design cellular telephones.

Perfumes

Anna Sui introduced her signature fragrance and cosmetic line in 1999.[9]

  • Night of Fancy
  • Live Your Dream
  • Dolly Girl Lil' Starlet
  • Flight of Fancy
  • Magic Romance
  • Dolly Girl Bonjour L'Amour!
  • Secret Wish
  • Dolly Girl on the Beach
  • Dolly Girl Ooh La love
  • Dolly Girl
  • Sui Love
  • Sui Dreams
  • Anna Sui Classic
  • Rock Me

References

External links


 
 
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