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Christian Lacroix

 
Modern Fashion Encyclopedia: Christian Lacroix
(French fashion designer)
  • Born: Christian Marie Marc Lacroix in Arles, France, 16 May 1951.
  • Education: Studied art history at Paul Valéry University, Montpellier, and museum studies at the Sorbonne, Paris, 1973-76.
  • Family: Married Françoise Rosensthiel, 1974.
  • Career: Freelance fashion sketcher, 1976-78; assistant at Hermés, Paris, 1978-80; assistant to Guy Paulin, 1980; designer/artistic director, Jean Patou, 1981-87; opened own couture and ready-to-wear house, 1987; established Christian Lacroix haute couture and salons in Paris, 1987; developed cruise collection, 1988; designed ready-to-wear collection for Genny SpA, 1988, followed by menswear collection and boutique; introduced seven accessory lines, from 1989; line of ties and hosiery, 1992; launched C'est la Vie! perfume, 1990; designed costumes for American Ballet Theater's Gaieté Parisienne, New York, 1988; "Bazar" collection, 1994; launched Jeans Lacroix, 1994; introduced Christian Lacroix collection of fine china, 1997; created jewelry line, 2000; debuted "Enfants de Christian Lacroix," children's line, 2001.
  • Awards: Dé d'Or award, 1986, 1988; Council of Fashion Designers of America award, 1987; Moliére award (for costumes for Phedre), 1995.
  • Address: 73 rue du Faubourg St Honoré, 75008 Paris, France.
  • Website:www.christian-lacroix.fr.

There is a prevalent myth in French haute couture that only once every decade does a new star emerge. Writer Nicholas Coleridge traced this path of succession from Paul Poiret, to Chanel, to Balenciaga, to Saint Laurent, then Lagerfeld (The Fashion Conspiracy, London, 1988). Judging by the buzz and excitement that preceded the launch of his first collection in the Salon Impérial Suite of the Hotel Intercontinental in July 1987, there could be no doubt Christian Lacroix was a new star.

Quite why Lacroix became the new star of couture is debatable, but his timing was definitely right. There had been no opening of a couture house since 1961 with Saint Laurent (Lagerfeld had become a star by resuscitating the established house of Chanel.) As the chairperson and financial director of the new house, Paul Audrain was to declare, "We had a very strong presentiment that the climate was right for a new couture house." New social and cultural changes had reversed the values of the 1970s; the jeans and t-shirt dressing, so prevalent during that decade, had changed. A new sexual identity had emerged. The entrepreneurial spirit of the 1980s created new money, and Lacroix's debut was in time to capitalize on this trend.

Lacroix had begun his career with an aspiration to be a museum curator. After moving to Paris from Arles in the early 1970s, he met his future wife Françoise Rosensthiel, who encouraged his interest in fashion, which led to his taking positions at Hermés and Guy Paulin. He became the designer for Jean Patou in 1981, revitalizing the flagging couture house and upping sales from thirty dresses a season to 100. He seduced the fashion press with spectacular shows, reviving fashion staples such as the frou-frou petticoat and the puffball skirt. In 1987, with the backing of five million francs from the textile conglomerate Financiére Agache, Lacroix opened his new couture house.

As a designer, Lacroix throws caution to the wind, providing the sort of luxurious product that, at first, justified the amount of "new money" spent on him. His collections are always an exotic, lavish cornucopia of influences, ranging from the primitive, rough naïveté of the paintings of the Cobra movement, to an homage to Lady Diana Cooper, to modern gypsies, travelers, and nomads. He uses the most luxurious fabrics in often unexpected mixes or even patchwork, embroidered brocades, fur, reembroidered lace, ethnic prints and embroideries, even gold embroidery. Nothing is considered too expensive or too outré to be included in the clothes.

An extravagant technicolor musical from the golden age of Hollywood would perhaps be an understatement when describing the impact of a Lacroix collection. As an artist, he is not afraid to plunder junk shops, museums, the theater and opera, or the glamor of the bullfight to create designs that astound yet are always stylish in their eclectic clutter. There are many strong retrospective references from the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s in a Lacroix collection, like the detached hauteur or waiflike gestures of fashion models from the period. The unapproachable allure of movie stars like Tippi Hedren or Capucine, or real-life personalities who embody these qualities, all inspire his designs, often resulting in eccentric accessories, colors, and poses.

Lacroix recognizes that contemporary couture is often only a public relations exercise for money-spinning ventures such as perfume or licensing deals using a designer name to sell a product. Lacroix, however, is fully aware of the value couture has in pushing fashion, projecting a dream, and making dramatically important fashion statements. This is essential if fashion is to survive commercially, because the ready-to-wear and mass-market manufacturers always see designers as the inspirations that direct the movement of fashion. Before his first show, Lacroix seemed to synthesize this point of view when he said, "I want to get back to the position where the couture becomes a kind of laboratory of ideas, the way it was with Schiaparelli 40 years ago."

The minimalist 1990s saw not only a downturn in interest in Lacroix's over-the-top extravagance but also in couture itself. Fashion critics said the Lacroix moment had been the 1980s, and it was over. Lacroix continued to design, however, with a signature collection of tableware and homeware, eventually turning to costume and designing for theater, ballet, opera, and finally film, for all of which his creations have always been well suited. His work in costume has received many awards. Through the changing climes of the fashion world and his own fortunes, however, Lacroix's central interest has remained couture, and he has continued to create one-of-a-kind couture for a cadre of wealthy clients. And as is ever the case in fashion, his moment was destined to come again.

With collections skewed a little younger, less "heavy, outdated, obsolete," in Lacroix's words, and more casual, the designer's shows again became a hot ticket as the decade turned and the 1990s gave way to the 21st century. And whatever the changes, the collections are still everything one expects from Lacroix—an exuberant riot of color, ecstatic, nearly surreal details, and rich fabric upon rich fabric. Trompe-l'oeil collars, a lacquered chiffon dress with rhinestones, fluffy pom-poms in hot pink or lemon, and hems dangling fringes of pastel-colored mink tails show that the designer has not given up his delight in "the cross-fertilization of styles."

Publications

By Lacroix:

    Books
  • Pieces of a Pattern, Lacroix by Lacroix, with Patrick Mauries, London, 1992.
  • Lacroix, New York, 1992.
  • Your World—and Welcome to It: A Rogue's Gallery of Interior Design, New York, 1998.

On Lacroix:

    Books
  • Coleridge, Nicholas, The Fashion Conspiracy, London, 1988.
  • Mulvagh, Jane, Vogue History of Twentieth Century Fashion, London, 1988.
  • Wilson, Elizabeth, and Lou Taylor, Through the Looking Glass, London, 1988.
  • Howell, Georgina, Sultans of Style: Thirty Years of Fashion and Passion, 1960-90, London, 1990.
  • Guillen, Yves-Pierre, and Jacqueline Claude, The Golden Thimble: French Haute Couture, Paris, 1990.
  • Martin, Richard, and Harold Koda, Bloom, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1995.
  • Mauries, Patrick, Christian Lacroix: The Diary of a Collection, New York, 1996.
  • Stegemeyer, Anne, Who's Who in Fashion, Third Edition, New York, 1996.
  • Baudot, François, Christian Lacroix, New York, 1997.
    Articles
  • Verdier, Rosy, "Jean Patou et Christian Lacroix," in L'Officiel (Paris), November 1984.
  • "Lacroix: The New Paris Star," in WWD, 31 July 1986.
  • McEvoy, Marian, "Blithe Spirit," in Connoisseur (London), November 1986.
  • Harbrecht, Ursula, "Christian Lacroix: Nouvelle Étoile au Firmament de Paris," in Textiles Suisses (Lausanne), March 1987.
  • Baumgold, Julie, "Dancing on the Lip of the Volcano: Christian Lacroix's Crash Chic," in New York, 30 April 1987.
  • Baudet, François, "Christian Lacroix: La Nouvelle Couture," in Elle (Paris), August 1987.
  • Brampton, Sally, "Lacroix's Grand Entrance," in the Sunday Express Magazine (London), 30 August 1987.
  • Paquin, Paquita, and Francis Dorleans, "Christian Lacroix: Fiévre Inaugurale," in L'Officiel (Paris), September 1987.
  • Howell, Georgina, "How Lacroix Took Paris by Storm," in the Sunday Times Magazine (London), 4 October 1987.
  • Mestiri, Mohand, "Christian Lacroix: Portrait Chinois d'un Provincial Cosmopolite," in Connaissance des Arts (Paris), October 1987.
  • "Lacroix Designs for Us," in Connoisseur, October 1987.
  • Brubach, Holly, "Lacroix Goes to the Ballet," in Vogue, February 1988.
  • Garmaise, Freda, "Chic Frills," in Ms. (New York), February 1988.
  • "Christian Lacroix," in Current Biography (New York), April 1988.
  • "Les Trésors de Christian Lacroix," in L'Officiel (Paris), March 1989.
  • Grossman, Lloyd, "The Wider Side of Paris," in Harpers & Queen (London), May 1989.
  • Donovan, Carrie, "The Three Who are Key: Couture's Future," in the New York Times Magazine, 27 August 1989.
  • "A Day in the Life of Christian Lacroix," in the Sunday Times Magazine (London), 27 August 1989.
  • Gerrie, Anthea, "Lacroix's Business Scents," in the Sunday Express Magazine (London), 18 March 1990.
  • Rafferty, Diane, "Christian Lacroix: The Art of Sensuality," in Connoisseur, June 1990.
  • "Lacroix's Fan Club," in WWD, 18 December 1990.
  • Levin, Angela, "Christian Lacroix," in You magazine of the Mail on Sunday (London), 10 February 1991.
  • Rolf, Gail, "Racy and Lacy…A Perfect Paris Match from Lacroix," in the Daily Mail (London), 20 July 1993.
  • Menkes, Suzy, "Sweetness and Light by Lacroix," in the International Herald Tribune (Paris), 27 January 1995.
  • Spindler, Amy M., "Olé: Lacroix Conquers the Couture," in the New York Times, 27 January 1995.
  • Schiro, Anne-Marie, "Lacroix and Rykiel: Classics," in the New York Times, 18 March 1995.
  • Mirabella, Grace, "Grace Mirabella on the Lacroix Nanosecond," in the Washington Post, 10 September 1995.
  • Johnson, Eunice W., "Comfort With a Touch of Luxe," in Ebony, February 1999.
  • Kadri, Françoise "Christian Lacroix, a Twenty-Year Love Affair with Japan," in Agence France Presse, 24 June 2000.
  • Shard, Sarah, "Lacroix in Full Technicolor for Next Winter," in Agence France Presse, 11 March 2001.
  • Lowthorpe, Rebecca, "Excess All Areas," in the Independent on Sunday, 1 July 2001.
  • Alexander, Hilary, "Couture Tales Off on a Magic Carpet Ride," in the Daily Telegraph, 11 July 2001.

— Kevin Almond; updated by Jessica Reisman

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Quotes By: Christian Lacroix
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"For me, elegance is not to pass unnoticed but to get to the very soul of what one is."

Wikipedia: Christian Lacroix
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Christian Lacroix, 20 Years of Haute Couture on the Catwalk -Arles (FR) July 2008.

Christian Marie Marc Lacroix (born May 16, 1951 in Arles, Bouches-du-Rhône; French pronunciation: [kʁistjɑ̃ lakʁwa]) is a high-end French fashion designer.

Contents

Early life

Christian Lacroix was born in Arles, in southern France. At a young age he began sketching historical costumes and fashions. Lacroix graduated from high school in 1969 and moved to Montpellier, to study Art History at the University of Montpellier. In 1971, he enrolled at the Sorbonne in Paris. While working on a dissertation on dress in French 18th-century painting, Lacroix also pursued a program in museum studies at the École du Louvre. His aspiration during this time was to become a museum curator. It was during this time he met his future wife Françoise Rosenthiel, whom he married in 1974.

Career

Around the same time, he met Jean-Jacques Picart. Picart was press attache for several haute couture houses and provided aid in gaining Christian Lacroix a job working at Hermès in 1978, where he worked on color schemes and the execution of designs, and then Guy Paulin in 1980. After graduating from the École du Louvre, in 1981 he started working at Jean Patou, where he worked until 1987.

With help from Jean-Jacques Picart, Lacroix managed to put out season after season of popular clothing. Bright colors, luxuriance, and perfection made Lacroix and Picart popular designers of the time.

Later, Lacroix would gain the award for "most influential designer" by the CFDA for foreign designer in January 1987.

Christian Lacroix couture

Christian Lacroix, 20 Years of Haute Couture on the Catwalk.

In 1987 he opened his own couture house. He began putting out ready-to-wear in 1988 drawing inspiration from diverse cultures. Critics commented that he did not seem to understand the type of clothing the working woman needed. In 1989, Lacroix launched jewelry, handbags, shoes, glasses, scarves and ties (along with ready-to-wear). In this same year, he opened boutiques within Paris, Arles, Aix-en-Provence, Toulouse, London, Geneva and Japan.

With his background in historical costume and clothing, Lacroix soon made headlines with his opulent, fantasy creations, including the short puffball skirt ("le pouf"), rose prints, and low décolleté necklines. He quoted widely from other styles—from fashion history (the corset and the crinoline), from folklore, and from many parts of the world—and he mixed his quotations in a topsy-turvy manner. He favored the hot colors of the Mediterranean region, a hodgepodge of patterns, and experimental fabrics, sometimes handwoven in local workshops.

In 2009 the fashion house, owned by duty-free retailer Falic Fashion Group, put the business into administration and laid off all but 12 workers. Lacroix's A/W 2009 Haute Couture was privately financed by Lacroix and each model was paid €50. "I didn't want to cry," said Lacroix "I want to continue, maybe in a different way, with a small atelier. What I really care about is the women who do this work" Lacroix said about his last Haute Couture collection. Throughout its history it never turned a profit and reported a €10 million loss in 2008.[1]

Diffusion lines

In 1994, Lacroix launched his Bazar line. His collections during the times of 1994 were based on old culture and folklore, as well as fables and the past. In 1995, he launched a towel line which contained a fashion and lifestyle side, which represent how the two intertwine ("two sides of the same coin").

In 1996, he launched a Jeans line. He included past traditions from all around the world, continuing the line with even more on ethnic arts.

In 1997, the Art de la Table line was launched by him in partnership with Christofle. A licensing agreement was also reached in this year with Pronuptian in which he could launch his Christian Lacroix Marriage line.

In 1999, he launched his first line of floral perfumes, and in 2000 he finished a line of novelty accessories which included semi-precious jewelry.

In 2001, Lacroix also launched a children's line and in 2002, he launched a perfume, Bazar, created by Bertrand Duchaufour, Jean-Claude Ellena and Emilie Copperman.

In 2004, Lacroix launched a lingerie for women line, as well as a menswear line.

He is known for his theatrical style which came from his work while in the theatre. This usually shows up with his use of colour in the collections he designs. Along with this, he is also known for his 'le pouf' gown (featuring the ball skirt), as well as closing all his haute couture fashion shows with a model dressed up as a bride.

Christian Lacroix Rouge, a perfume created by Lacroix exclusively for Avon Products.

He served as the Creative Director for the Italian fashion house Emilio Pucci from 2002-2005. He left on agreeable terms as he and the house believed that since he had other pursuits, it would be unfair to the house to not put in the energy required for future collections along with his other work.

Christian Lacroix has designed many dresses for Hollywood stars; among them, he is responsible for designing Christina Aguilera's wedding dress and in the 1990s was famed as being a favourite designer of Edina Monsoon in the UK sitcom Absolutely Fabulous (for which the house drew dubious credit).

He has also been the designer of the new uniform of Air France staff and crew in 2004 and pyjamas signed by him are handed out to passengers travelling on Air France First Class (L'Espace Premier).

Today, Lacroix has 60 points of sale within France (department stores included). Around the world, Lacroix has 1,000 total points of sale.

For Winter 2007, He has partnered with Avon cosmetics to introduce a new fragrance exclusive to Avon called Christian Lacroix Rouge for women (plus body lotion and shower gel) and Christian Lacroix Noir for men (plus after shave lotion and shower gel). His Avon product line was expanded with the release of Christian Lacroix Absynthe in the Spring of 2009 and Christian Lacroix Absynthe For Him in the autumn of 2009.

For Summer 2008, he is the guest curator of the Rencontres d'Arles.

Christian Lacroix's costume designs for the opera, theatre, dance and music can be seen at the exhibition "Christian Lacroix Costumier" at the National Museum of Singapore from March to June 2009.

References

External links


 
 

 

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