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Claude Montana

 
(French designer)
  • Born: Paris, 29 June 1949.
  • Education: Studied chemistry and law.
  • Family: Married Wallis Franken, 1993 (died 1996).
  • Career: Freelance jewelry designer, London, 1971-72; designer, with Michelle Costas, ready-to-wear and accessories line for Idéal-Cuir, Paris, 1973; assistant designer, 1973, and head designer, 1974, MacDouglas Leathers, Paris; freelance designer, Complice, Ferrer y Sentis Knitwear, Paris, from 1975; founded own company, 1979; Hommes Montana presented, 1981; first boutique opened, Paris, 1983; Montana Pour Femme fragrance introduced, 1986; signed with Gruppo GFT to license womenswear, 1987; Parfum d'Homme introduced, 1989; Parfum d'Elle introduced, 1990; designer in charge of haute couture, Lanvin, 1989-92; continues ready-to-wear collections under own name, diffusion line introduced, 1991; Parums Montana acquired by Clarins SA, 1995; left Gruppo GFT for Groupe Mendes, 1996; launched leather accessories, 1996; launched Just Me fragrance, 1997; sought protection from creditors, 1997; firm and name sold, 1998; Montana Blu collection introduced, 1998; Montana Blu fragrance debuted, 2001.
  • Exhibitions:Intimate Architecture: Contemporary Clothing Design, Hayden Gallery, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1982.
  • Awards: Prix Medicis, 1989; Fragrance Foundation award, 1990; Golden Thimble award, 1990, 1991.
  • Address: 54 avenue Marceau, 75008 Paris, France.
  • Website:www.claude-montana.com.

In the late 1970s and 1980s Claude Montana was known for an outré silhouette and commanding sense of aggression that made him both enfant terrible in a cultural sense and yet fashion's most devoted adherent in design. Padded shoulders and leathers seemed to some observers a misogynist's view of women in the manner of a cartoon. To others, however, the same style renewed the shoulder-accented horizontal of Constructivism, or even the influence of Balenciaga's surgically acute cut. Little wonder, then, that Montana said in an interview in 1989, "I'm like a battlefield inside, a mass of contradictions." More than ever, Montana has proved in the late 1980s and 1990s how contradictory and how complex his style is, incapable of the kinds of knee-jerk reactions that many critics had initially. Few designers have been as virulently attacked as Montana has, sometimes for "gay-clone" proclivities to leather, for supposed misogyny, for impractical clothing, for excessive accoutrements. Leather jackets borrowed from menswear—bikers and the military—caused strong controversy in the American press and market in the 1980s when Montana appropriated them. A decade later, Ralph Lauren, Donna Karan, Calvin Klein, and Byron Lars were working with similar looks to no protest (and Saint Laurent had long borrowed from the male wardrobe to only mild demurral).

Few designers today can be equally admired for the surety of cut, the sensuousness of appearance, the femininity that is beneath the bold forms, the luxurious seductions of fabrics more varied than leather alone, and the continuous and consummate mastery of a fashion design that always plays between the abstract forms of art and the conventions of clothing. Indeed, Constructivism is a strong influence on Montana's work. Top-heavy geometry twirling into a narrow skirt or pencil-thin trousers was not commonplace until Montana offered the option. Reductive by nature, Montana has vacillated in terms of accessorizing, particularly in the mid-1980s, but by the 1990s he clearly preferred an austerity about clothing, approximating the linear probity and arc-based sculptural form. Like Constructivist drawings for the stage, Montana's designs come to life in the animation of gyrating proportions, often with exaggerated shoulders or collars, almost invariably with a very narrow waist, and the spin of a peplum over a narrow skirt. Cocoon coats could seem to be the nimbus of abstraction; spiralling line, alternately clinging to the body and spinning away, seemed a gesture of whole cloth, unpieced.

Montana's principal aesthetic contribution is silhouette; nonetheless, his materials, beginning historically with leather, and his color palette are beautiful and sensuous. What became the power look in women's clothing in the mid-1980s is derived from Montana's aesthetic, so persuasive was it as an option for assertive presence without sacrifice of the female form. Based on circuiting spirals and a few strong lines realized on the body, Montana's aesthetic was described by some critics as being too Space Age or futuristic, but recognized by its advocates for its invocation of the principles of Futurist abstraction. Moreover, after a signal collection for fall-winter 1984, in which Montana toned down the most extreme aspects of his style, he remained true to his aesthetic principles and interests, demonstrating that they were not merely the radical forms they had seemed at first, but the fundamental forms that fashion had known since Thayatt and Exter, Adrian and Balenciaga. As early as 1979, when many might have dismissed him as an iconoclast, Montana admitted to André Leon Talley of his admiration for Vionnet and Madame Grés, likewise two designers of utmost simplicity of form (Women's Wear Daily, 13 March 1978).

What had been extreme now seems pure. Even in that convention, Montana has emulated avant-garde art. As an artist-designer, he sustains his own predilections. For example, the gargantuan shoulders are reduced in the late 1980s and great, oversized collars keep the outspoken gesture to the top. Robert Knafo (Connoisseur, November 1988) describes that transition: "casting out the sharp-shouldered, fearsomely assertive Montana woman, installing in her place a mellower, softer-edged, more romantic figure, although no less self-assured." Indeed, it is some of the referentiality of fashion—association we make with clothing types and image—that has attributed the controversial profile to Montana as a designer. More importantly, he has been a steadfast practitioner of a kind of isolated, non-referential abstraction, obdurately and passionately and compellingly exploring fashion at its most distinct cut. Montana's design survival as a classic figure and a model with lasting impact on other advanced designers in modern fashion attests to that design primacy and perseverance.

After his Lanvin stint, Montana maintained his precise, inimitable approach to fashion. His fall 1995 Paris womenswear collection was presented in stunning, futuristic white. Women's Wear Daily (17 October 1995) applauded the line's "sharp edges, swirling seams and strict silhouettes,"concluding "nobody beats Montana for his precision tailoring." The following year Montana moved the licensing of his two prominent womenswear lines, Montana Femme and State of Montana, from Gruppo GFT to French fashion firm Groupe Mendes. Montana menswear, however, remained with GFT. Additionally in 1996 Montana introduced a new leather collection including handbags, belts, travel bags, and other smaller accessories.

Unfortunately for Montana, brewing legal battles overshadowed his fashion contributions. The imbroglio stemmed from a 1995 tiff with a small firm named Montana Knits, which sought to trademark its name. Claude objected, having already trademarked his apparel lines (Montana, Claude Montana, and State of Montana), and believing Montana Knits would confuse buyers. The owners of Montana Knits, Tom and Ann Doolings, decided to take Claude to court over the matter. Suddenly, it was a cause célébre, with high profile fashion icons like Liz Claiborne championing the underdog Doolings. The case was decided in favor of the Doolings; Montana then subsequently renamed his diffusion line, State of Montana, to Montana White Label.

If the lawsuit was troubling for Montana, what occurred on its heels was much more vexing: his firm was forced to seek protection from creditors in 1997 after several years of sliding sales, setbacks, and just plain bad luck. His woes had included lower margins after switching his Japanese licensee, losing prominent retailers Bloomingdale's and Henri Bendel, and being forced to close several stores for underperformance. The Montana name and the designer's skills, however, were never in question; he was still roundly praised by buyers and critics alike.

Montana finally decided it was time to sell, a decision many of his fellow designers had faced. He told Women's Wear Daily (12 December 1997), "There comes a moment in your life when you say, 'Now, what really interests me is my work and creating.' And so I'm ready now to open up…to an investor with whom I get along, and with whom I share the same ideas about future strategy." That investor turned out to be Jacques Berger, formerly of Nina Ricci, and two partners who paid $670,000 for 51-percent of the struggling fashion firm. Ironically, part of the agreement called for Montana to give up the rights to his name, something he had fought so vehemently for in the past. The designer would, however, maintain the right to design for the house for another ten years.

Montana seemed happy with his prospects, "This is going to give me much more freedom to travel, to sit down and talk with others in the studio about designs," he told Women's Wear Daily (13 April 1998). "Isolation is not very healthy for creativity…. In the end, my biggest role hasn't really changed," Montana explained, "I'm the artistic director for the house and now I will have more energy to throw into my work. That should be stimulating for everybody."

Free from the pressures of running a business, Montana rebounded quickly and unveiled Montana Blu, a younger, hipper collection for women in late 1998. The line seemed to stem from Montana's passion for contemporary art. "Sculpture and painting are inexhaustible inspiration sources," he noted in a biographical sketch at his website. In Montana Blu he has created perhaps the most profound designs bearing his signature; it was successful enough to spawn its own fragrance in 2001, while his signature line was praised by Women'sWear Daily (19 March 2001), "Whatever the Claude Montana collection should be, whatever it could be or once was, for fall, the designer stuck to stuff he knows well—sexy leathers and glamorous furs."

Publications

On Montana:

    Books
  • Hayden Gallery, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Intimate Architecture: Contemporary Clothing Design [exhibition catalogue], Cambridge, 1982.
  • Perschetz, Lois, ed., W, The Designing Life, New York, 1987.
    Articles
  • Talley, André Leon, "The State of Montana," in WWD, 13 March 1978.
  • McCarthy, Patrick, "Claude Reigns," in WWD, 4 September 1979.
  • "Paris Advance: Claude Montana," in WWD, 2 October 1980.
  • Brantley, Ben, "I, Claude," in WWD, 18 May 1984.
  • Brampton, Sally, "La régle du jeu," in the Observer (London), 5 May 1985.
  • Filmer, Denny, "Claude Montana," in Cosmopolitan (London), October 1988.
  • Knafo, Robert, "Claude Montana," in Connoisseur, November 1988.
  • Brubach, Holly, "Selling Montana," in the New Yorker, 23 January 1989.
  • Petkanas, Christopher, "Chez Claude," in Harper's Bazaar (New York), June 1989.
  • Gross, Michael, "The Great State of Montana," in New York, 31 July 1989.
  • "Montana: Then and Now," in WWD, 19 October 1989.
  • Thim, Dennis, "The New State of Montana," in WWD, 29 May 1990.
  • Vernesse, Francine, "Viva Montana," in Elle (Paris), 13 August 1990.
  • Mulvagh, Jane, "Lanvin c'est moi," in the Sunday Times Magazine (London), 4 November 1990.
  • Spindler, Amy M., "Claude's New Adventure," in WWD, 26 February 1992.
  • James, Laurie, "The State of Montana," in Harper's Bazaar, October 1992.
  • Schiro, Anne-Marie, "Photogenic, But Out of Focus," in the New York Times, 20 March 1995.
  • "Montana Leaves GFT for Mendes," in WWD, 9 May 1996.
  • Weisman, Katherine, "Montana Leather Accessories Lines to Debut," in WWD, 9 September 1996.
  • Wilson, Eric, "Trademark Dispute Pits State of Montana vs. Claude Montana," in WWD, 21 March 1997.
  • ——, "Ortenbergs Back Little Guy in Montana Wars," in WWD, 22 April 1997.
  • Aktar, Alev, "Just Me: Montana's Next Fragrance Foray," in WWD, 27 June 1997.
  • Raper, Sarah, and Katherine Weisman, "Claude Montana Files for Credit Protection; Restructuring Planned," in WWD, 19 November 1997.
  • Pogoda, Dianne M., "The Year in Fashion," in WWD, 15 December 1997.
  • Raper, Sarah, "Montana Has Possible Buyer in Ex-Ricci VP," in WWD, 18 March 1998.
  • ——, "Claude Montana Hits Comeback Trail," in WWD, 13 April 1998.
  • Weisman, Kathering, "Montana's New Blu," in WWD, 1 October 1998.
  • "…Claude Montana Did Sexy Leathers and Glam Furs…," in WWD, 19 March 2001.
  • "Fresh and Fragrant 'Blu' Breath of Air," in the New Straits Times, 24 May 2001.

— Richard Martin Nelly Rhodes

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Wikipedia: Claude Montana
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Claude Montana is a French fashion designer, known for his refined, figure-hugging designs, in lightweight materials or heavy leather. He is sometimes jokingly known as the "King of Shoulder Pads" for the aggressive shapes for women he created in the 1980s. In the middle of the 1990s, Montana's orchestrated and aggressive style became outdated, as it appeared difficult to translate the force of the successful bold lines into the softer trends. Even though the more casual and commercial Montana BLU collection was softer in line, it was not the success the company hoped for. The House of Montana, founded in 1979, went bankrupt in 1997.

Born in Paris in 1949 to a Catalonian father and German mother, Montana began his career by designing papier-mâché jewelry covered with rhinestones. Later, he discovered leather and the complex techniques associated with it, eventually becoming a leading force in leather. His first fashion show took place in 1976. He was an avid colorist and favored blue, red, metallic, and neutral tones, in luxurious materials such as cashmere, leather and silk. He started his own company in 1979, and quickly became a darling of 1980s high fashion along with Thierry Mugler, who also favored aggressive shapes and strong colours.

In 1981, Montana designed his first collection for men, called Montana Hommes, in which he focused on the color and material of each garment rather than trivial details. From 1990 to 1992 he designed haute couture collections for the House of Lanvin, for which he received two consecutive Golden Thimble awards. Despite critical acclaim, Montana's bold designs we financially disastrous for the house, created at a total estimated loss of $50 million, and he was ultimately replaced by Dominique Morlotti. In 1999, he designed an affordable line of clothing for women, Montana BLU. It was inspired by his favorite themes but modified to fit the style of sportswear and citywear.

Montana's fashion shows excelled in styling as well as in presentation. Because of their vibrations, modelling for Montana became prestigious and invitations to his shows the hottest tickets in town. With fashion's return to harder lines in 2007 Montana has become an inspiration for many designers. Alexander McQueen has praised and honored Montana many times in his collections. Both designers share a love for construction and high quality.

On July 21, 1993, Montana married model Wallis Franken. It was a marriage of convenience and friendship, as Montana was openly homosexual. They were the same age, had been friends for 18 years, and she had served as his muse for many of his fashion innovations. Wallis already had two daughters and a granddaughter by a previous marriage. In June 1996, Wallis died after falling three stories from their Paris apartment. The death was ruled a suicide.

Currently, Montana lives in Spain.

Awards

  • Best Women's Collection, Summer 1985, Paris.
  • Best European Designer, Fall/Winter 1987/88, Munchener Modewoche, Germany.
  • Balenciaga Prize for Best Designer, 1989.
  • Golden Thimble Award, 1991, 1992.

References


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