Showing posts with label Fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fashion. Show all posts

Monday, 24 August 2015

Passage 5: The Creation of A Dior



Photo by Laziz Hamani
Image courtesy of: Royal Ontario Museum





Video courtesy of: christianzh ~ YouTube


 Video courtesy of: CARLOSZH FF CHANNEL YouTube




In 2011, the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) in Toronto commissioned, along with an accompanying fifty-minute documentary film—Passage #5—a Christian Dior haute couture ensemble for its 2012 exhibition ‘BIG.’ A one-piece tulle-and-silk faille coat-dress originally modelled by Olga Sherer, ‘Passage 5’ was the fifth garment—in a collection of thirty-two pieces—in what proved to be John Galliano's last haute couture collection (Spring-Summer 2011) for the House of Dior; it was also, by Galliano's own admission, his most technically challenging collection to date.


Based on a loose re-configuration of the epoch-defining ‘New Look’ silhouette (cornerstone of the House of Dior), the creation of ‘Passage 5’ alone required 166 meters of fabric and five-hundred hours of labour to complete by a multitude of ‘petites mains’—not only those of the Maison Dior ateliers but also other attendant craftsmen and women of satellite ateliers. These other ancillary ateliers involved Ateliers Gérard Lognon, one of the last remaining (and celebrated) plisseurs in Paris (member of Paraffection since 2013—an assemblage of several Chanel subsidiary ateliers, which currently include: Maison Lesage, master embroiderers and beaders; Maison Massaro, the bespoke shoemakers;  Maison Desrues, button-makers and costume jewellers; Marcelle Guillet, makers of artificial flowers; Maison Lemarié, featherers as well as creators of  flowers; Goossens Paris, jewellers; and in 2012, the Scottish cashmere manufacturer Barrie Knitwear), and Maison Hurel, embroiderers and designers/manufacturers of luxury textiles who were responsible for the design and execution of the beadwork for ‘Passage 5’. (Sources: ROM Collections: Dior Gown, Royal Ontario Museum, undated; Blanks T., Style.com, January 24, 2011)



(Olga Sherer)
The above two images are courtesy of: Studio H2O (Vimeo channel)




The Christian Dior Spring-Summer 2011 Haute Couture collection was Galliano's homage to the artwork—and career—of René Gruau, a close friend of Dior's and for whom Gruau was artistic director of Christian Dior Parfums advertising. (A little-known fact is that at Central Saint Martins, John Galliano had originally studied fashion illustration, fully intending to become an illustrator; he is even alleged to have signed a contract to work as an illustrator in Manhattan, New York City.) The collection was specifically inspired by ‘Dior Illustrated: René Gruau and the Line of Beauty,’ the 2010 exhibition—curated by Vincent Leret—held at London's Somerset House (for which Galliano personally selected an assortment of Dior haute couture dresses, including one especially designed by Galliano for the exhibit) and was based on Gruau’s illustrations for Christian Dior in the late 1940s and 1950s. Galliano's interpretation of Gruau's work for Dior—which certainly contributed to the House's iconic imagery—took the ambitious and difficult form of translating the impressionistic, two-dimensional free-form strokes of an illustrator's pencil or chalk to the three-dimensional forms of thirty-two ensembles. As Tim Blanks of Style.com, in his review of Galliano's collection for Dior, noted: “The graphite smears, pencil strokes and scribbles, erasure marks, and gouache washes of Gruau's illustrations were duplicated in cloth and embroidery, used, said the designer,in an illustrative way.’ ... It was remarkable that such extravagance managed to capture the speed, the spontaneity, the airiness, even the economy of the illustrator's work.” Mr. Blanks goes on further to state: “The most dramatic effects were chiaroscuro—the interplay of light and shade, duplicating the wash of Gruau's watercolors and the shadows of Irving Penn's classic couture photography. Where it seemed that hand-painting fabric would have been the simplest way to achieve the desired result, Galliano and his studio used seven layers of tulle to create a shimmering depth of dégradé. ... Embroidery was used on one side of the fabric only, so it cast a subtle relief shadow. Ostrich feathers made swooshes of ink on a huge ball gown, pencil lines were picked out in sequins. And Stephen Jones was in his element—his hats were trompe l'oeil strokes of paint, soaring heavenward.” Viewing the video of the collection, the mind reels at the concerted efforts necessary—not to mention the inordinate amount of time, patience, and scale of the astounding skills of the combined ateliers—to achieve such effects (“in an illustrative way”) and make them seem so decidedly effortless. (Quotes: Tim Blanks,  Style.com, January 24, 2011)



(Olga Sherer)
Top image is courtesy of: Cool Chic Style & Fashion
 The bottom two images are courtesy of: beauties from Belarus






Video courtesy of Royal Ontario Museum ~ YouTube





As a fashion illustrator par excellenceRené Gruau (1909-2004)—born Count Renato Zavagli Ricciardelle delle Camminate, in Rimini, Italy, to an aristocratic Italian father and a socialite French mother, Marie Gruau de la Chesnaie (whose maiden name he later adopted, after his parents' divorce when he was three, and following his mother's relocation to Paris where he subsequently lived and worked)—was considered to be one of the 20th century's finest (his work is “characterized by his fluid, expressive, and seemingly effortless lines, and by his ability to distill his subjects to their essence for maximum effect – a mouth, a coiffure, a gesture, the structure of a garment is each described so convincingly, and with such graceful economy of means[Quote: René Gruau: Master of Fashion Illustration, Christie's, 2013]); his long career, begun at a very early age, encompassed work for such prestigious American and French fashion magazines and newspapers as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Flair, Femina, Marie-Claire, L’Officiel and Le Figaro, as well as some of fashion's most illustrious names of the mid-20th century (these ranked Balmain, Fath, Molyneux, Givenchy, Balenciaga, Lanvin, and Schiaparelli among them). But Gruau's output was not confined solely to fahion, producing commercial posters for the famed Parisian cabarets Moulin Rouge and Lido de Paris, advertising campaigns for Air France and Martini, and the cinema poster for Federico Fellini’s 1959 film, La Dolce Vita, for example, thereby reaching a far greater audience. His name, however, is most intimately associated by his creative collaboration with Christian Dior. (Gruau's early work is distinguished by his signature, ‘Gruau,’ topped by a star, later simply reduced to the distinctive cypher of an elegant capital ‘G,’ also surmounted by the same star.) It was René Gruau's close association with and understanding of Christian Dior—a relationship begun in 1947 with the début of Dior's eponymous collection, in February of that same year, and the advent of  his ‘New Look’—and Dior's distinctive post-Second World War aesthetic that allowed Gruau to perfectly and graphically capture the momentous spirit of the Dior brand.
(Sources: René Gruau: a new look at the influential Dior illustrator, Beyfus,  D., The Telegraph, October 23, 2010; Blanks T., Style.com, January 24, 2011; René Gruau: Master of Fashion Illustration, Christie's: 3436, 2013; René Gruau, Fashion Illustration Gallery, 2015)



“[Gruau] captured Dior's style and spirit better than any other because he understood his long-term friend... for me a Gruau sketch captures the energy, the sophistication and daring of Dior, and equally is testimony to an enduring friendship.” ~ John Galliano




For centuries, as a genre, fashion illustration (in the form of ‘fashion plates’—engravings, paintings, sketches, and even dolls that were sent travelling abroad) was the primary means of disseminating new developments (and changing attitudes, changing styles) in fashion; it was not until the 20th century that fashion illustration was inevitably and finally usurped by a more immediate medium: photography. Still, illustration survived (“...a reminder of what the brush, pen and ink achieved before the camera took over[Quote: Drusilla Beyfus, The Telegraph, 2010])—albeit in a much narrower, less extensive margin than before. That said, there have been other illustrators of note (some, perhaps, better known than others) who have sustained the art of fashion illustration—Antonio Lopez, Thierry Perez, David Downton, Kenneth Paul Block, Joe Eula—all of whom are/were immensely talented in their own right and have/had reached the apogee of their respective careers. But it was by virtue of Gruau's enduring, sixty-year-long career—a rare longevity—and his adaptability (by way of broadening his work, outside the confines of fashion, for commercial purposes) that set him apart from his peers. To this day—and most likely well into the future—the name and work of René Gruau continues (and will continue) to abide and be inextricably linked, and with good reason, with the golden era of haute couture. It is only apt, then—if somewhat ironic—to conclude by borrowing the introductory line from Christie's 2013 online auction of Gruau's prints (René Gruau: Master of Fashion Illustration, Sale no. 3436): “The art of René Gruau is a timeless expression of style, elegance and sophistication.”




(Olga Sherer)
Above left image, courtesy of: Ma Cherie, Dior | Above right image, courtesy of: Afterblack





Video courtesy of: Alexei Crombez ~ YouTube




Suggested readings:



René Gruau (1984), by René Gruau & Joëlle Chariau: Rizzoli


Gruau (1999), by René Gruau: te Neues


Gruau (2003), by François Baudot: Perseus Distribution Services


100 Years of Fashion Illustration (2007), by Cally Blackman: Laurence King Publishing


Gruau et la mode (Gruau and Fashion) (2008), by Elisa Tosi Brandi: Silvana


Dior Illustrated: René Gruau & the Line of Beauty (2010): Somerset House


Gruau: Portraits of Men (2012), by Sylvie Nissen & Rejane Bargiel: Assouline Publishing




Monday, 15 July 2013

Close To Perfection VII: Elie Saab Haute Couture - Autumn/Winter 2013-2014





 
 

Image courtesy of: Cosas | Una Revista Internacional



 
I was born with this passion of creating and making dresses and was always surrounded by beautiful women, from my sisters to neighbours, so the desire to dress them and make them look elegant was my constant inspiration.”




In terms of sheer extravagance, nothing on Earth compares with the no-expense-spared extravaganza that is Paris Haute Couture Week, a biannual convergence of media, expectation and craftsmanship at its highest pinnacle. At its best, it is a spectacle like no other in the world, a sartorial display—ranging from the cerebral to the sublime—staged to impress. At its simplest, it is the relentless pursuit of perfection. It is no less than the juncture at which commerce and art intersect.


Presented in the arcaded hall of le Palais Brongniart, 28 Place de la Bourse—situated in the Vivienne neighbourhood between the Place de la Concorde and the Louvre Museum—on the afternoon of Wednesday, July 3rd, Elie Saab—the self-taught, Paris/Beirut-based Lebanese designer whose Beirut-based five-storey building, opened in 2005, comprises the designer's atelier and workshops, offices, an haute couture showroom as well as  a prêt-à-porter boutique, (his French atelier is located at 1 Rond Point des Champs Elysées), boasts five-hundred seamstresses, the largest couture atelier in the world (in comparison with Christian Dior's, one of France's preeminent couture Houses, which employs one-hundred-and-twenty)—showed forty-eight pieces (three of which were the finale's duplicate strapless bridesmaids dresses) in his latest haute couture collection for autumn-winter 2013, an evening collection “devoted... to the cocktail and post cocktail hour(Quote: Armstrong, L., Telegraph, 2013). Reportedly inspired by the gem stones typically found in a royal crown—jewel tones of ruby red, sapphire blue, emerald green and silvery-white diamonds—the show was sectioned according to monochromatic colour schemes, beginning with ruby-red and progressing into the other jewel tones of the collection. (Sources: Palais Brongniart, undated; Elie Saab, undated; Armstrong, L., Telegraph, July 3, 2013)

 


Image courtesy of: Elie Saab
 

 
 
It has been said that M. Saab prefers to “lavish his attentions and significant resources not on his shapes but on his embroideries and beadwork” and that is evidently true in his latest presentation  (Quote: Phelps, N., Style.com, 2013). Still, it is a collection more remarkable for its arresting embellishments (embroideries and beadwork)—from the simple to the ornate, nearly every one of this forty-eight-piece collection was embellished—rather than for innovative cuts or silhouettes which tended towards the conventional: M. Saab profusely scattered crystals and sequins “on practically every inch of silk, mousseline and lace he could get his needle on(Quote: WWD, 2013). While he showed symmetrically-cut ensembles, there were some one-shoulder, asymmetrical pieces as well, including a one-shoulder beaded-bodice jumpsuit.


For his finale, M. Saab sent out a bride—accompanied by her three bridesmaids who carried her lengthy beaded-tulle veil—in a heavily-beaded gown “fashioned from layer upon layer of tulle sumptuously embroidered with [smokey] quartz, crystal, and glitter, and a veil to match(Quote: Phelps, N., Style.com, 2013). The dress, however lavish, appeared to be so cumbersome that the bride-model's attempt to elegantly negotiate the length of the runway may have been valiant but it was an effort without much success. As Lisa Armstrong pointed out in her report for The Telegraph, the wedding gown was “so OTT [‘over the top’] its model was forced to adopt a strange rolling gait that made her look like a huge sparkly tractor(Telegraph, 2013).
(Sources: Elie Saab, July 3, 2013; Phelps, N., Style.com, July 3, 2013; WWD, July 3, 2013; Armstrong, L., Telegraph, July 3, 2013)



 
Elie Saab's sketches of costumes for Dita Von Teese's appearance at Paris's Crazy Horse ~ February 1-15, 2009
(The burlesque strip-tease artist collaborated with M. Saab on costumes for her Crazy Horse cabaret show)
 
Elie Saab fitting Dita Von Teese for one of her costumes
 
The above four images are courtesy of: Pocket Venus

 
 
 
Although he had shown collections in his native Beirut, Lebanon—(he was born in the coastal village of Damour, situated south of Beirut)—since the age of eighteen, his interest in dressmaking began when he was only nine years old and his first clientele were his sisters. In 1982, when he was eighteen years of age, he opened his first couture atelier in Beirut, catering to neighbourhood women and to the city's society ladies (his first fashion show, held at the Casino du Liban, was a well-received début).


But Elie Saab catapulted to overnight fame in 2002 when, as the first Middle Eastern designer to dress an Oscar winner, actress Halle Berry attended the 2002 ceremony—and tearfully accepted her Oscar statuette for Best Actress for her 2001 movie, “Monster's Ball”—in the now-famous, strategically embroidered burgundy Saab gown; the actress wore another Saab creation (this one form the designer's Spring/Summer 2003 Haute Couture collection)—a one-shoulder, asymmetrical gold-coloured gown—the following year for the 2003 ceremony. (The Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture, now more simply known as Mode à Paris, had previously invited M. Saab to present in Paris in 2000—he has the distinction of being the first Arab to be admitted to the Syndicale—where he began showing the four traditional annual collections of haute couture and prêt-à-porter lines, becoming a membre correspondant six years later, in 2006—the highest honour the organization bestows on non-French designers.) Since then, Elie Saab has become a fixture on red-carpet events with clients ranging from A-list ‘Hollywood royalty’ and pop-music ‘princesses’ to real-life royalty:  Angelina Jolie, Nicole Kidman, Helen Mirren, Gwyneth Paltrow, Charlize Theron, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Beyoncé Knowles, Dita Von Teese, and Jordan's Queen Rania—who wore Elie Saab to her coronation—have all donned his creations. (Sources: Elie Saab | Vogue Australia, undated; Elie Saab, undated; King, S., Saab Story, Vanity Fair, October 8, 2011)

 
 
Constructing couture
 
Above left: “A heavily beaded dress awaits completion on a client’s Stockman.” ~ Steve King
 
Above right: “Mr. Saab will often draw directly onto dressmakers’ dummies or onto fabric, bypassing the pattern stage—these Stockmen show his guidelines and partially embroidered fabric swatches.” ~ Steve King
 The above two images & quotes are courtesy of: Saab Story | Vanity Fair
(The above two photos are by Tinko Czetwertynski)
 
 

 
The designer in his atelier
Above left image, courtesy of: Fashionspam: The daily dose of life | Above right image, courtesy of: Via Montenapoleone
Bottom image, courtesy of: CrossBreeding by Isaac Estévez
 
 
 
 
Elie Saab understands the way Arab women live now. His creations carry a message of subliminal freedom and luxury. His success is the result of merging the values of the Middle East with the modern standards of the West, to produce a fusion of the two in wearable works of art.” ~ Alanood Al-Sabah
 
 
 
 
 
The bridal gown ~ Autumn/Winter 2013-2014 Haute Couture
The above two images are courtesy of: SHOWstudio
 
 
 
 
 My personality resembles my designs to a large extent. I am in sync with myself and I am transparent, just like my designs.”


 
 
Indeed, viewing his latest couture collection, set, as it is, against a red-lit background with models strutting on a high-gloss red floor—an allusive reference to such red-carpet events as movie premieres and award ceremonies to come perhaps?—there is a clear indication that the aim of the collection seems to be made-to-measure for Hollywood stars (and Saudi princesses).
 
 
Elie Saab's ultra-feminine designs—as well-known for their draping, plunging necklines and mile-high slits as they are for their splendid embellishments—are currently sold in twenty-two countries and the designer has flagship boutiques in Paris—opened in 2007—London as well as Dubai. Aside from his prêt-à-porter and haute couture collections, the Elie Saab brand has expanded over the years and now encompasses accessories (handbags, shoes and jewellery); as of 2011, an eponymous fragrance, Elie Saab: Le Parfum (composed of orange blossom, jasmine, honey rose), has also been incorporated into the brand.




Beadwork details ~ (Look 1) & (Look 43)
 
Close-up of the beaded & crystal-encrusted bridal veil
(Elie Saab Autumn/Winter 2013-2014 Haute Couture Collection)
Above left image, courtesy of: Rebelle Fleur | Above right image, courtesy of: killerqueen
Bottom image, courtesy of: We Hear It

 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The above forty-seven images are courtesy of: Vogue Australia
 (For extensive backstage photos before the show, please visit: L'Express)
 

 
 
 
Video courtesy of: ElieSaabChannel ~ YouTube
 
 
 
 
Image courtesy of: Fashion Industry Network
 
 
 
 
I’m not working to be a legend, or to be like Fairuz. The people choose to let you be a legend; you can’t decide to be a legend.
I’m so proud if people say that I present a good image of my country. The statement, ‘Lebanese designer, Elie Saab,’
for me, this is enough.”