Madame Grès

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Madame Grès
Born
Germaine Émilie Krebs

(1903-11-30)30 November 1903
Paris, France
Died24 November 1993(1993-11-24) (aged 89)
OrganizationGrès
Spouse(s)Serge Czerefkov
Children1

Madame Grès (30 November 1903– 24 November 1993) born Germaine Émilie Krebs, also known as Alix Barton and Alix, was a leading French couturier of her generation and costume designer. She founded the former haute couture fashion house "Grès" as well as the associated perfume house "Parfums Grès" which still exists today in Switzerland.[1] Remembered as the "Sphinx of Fashion", Grès was notoriously secretive about her personal life and was seen as a workaholic with a furious attention to detail, therefore she preferred to let her work do the talking.[2] Called the "master of the wrapped and draped dress"[3] and "queen of drapery",[2] Grès is best known for her floor-length draped Grecian goddess gowns.[4] Grès's minimalistic draping techniques and her attention and respect for the female body[5] have had a lasting effect on the haute couture and fashion industry and she is credited for inspiring a number of recent designers.[6]

Biography[]

Early life[]

Madame Grès was born to a middle-class French Jewish family[7] and raised in Paris, France. Early in life, Grès studied painting and sculpting.[8] Grès originally dreamed of becoming a sculptress but after many objections made by her family she shifted her interests towards the art of fashion design and clothing making.[6] Using her formal training in sculpture, Grès was able to apply her sculpting techniques to her fabric forms.[6] Grès's first job in the industry of fashion was a woman's hat maker where she excelled until she began focusing on couture dressmaking.[8] After distinguishing her area of interest, Grès received her early training in haute couture dressmaking at the fashion house, , a house known for requiring extreme perfection.[4]

Alix era[]

In 1932, Grès opened her first couture fashion house, La Maison Alix. In 1933, Grès and her coworker, Juliette Barton, combined their names to create Alix Barton, which she designed under for a short amount of time.[8] Grès dropped the "Barton" in 1934 and designed under her own name, "Alix", for the remainder of the 1930s and up until 1942.[5] During this time, Grès's signature style of classical drapery and elegant gowns became the signature of the couture fashion house.[6] At this time she became known for her technique of using live mannequins, designing and creating garments directly on the models.[4] Her early work shows Greco-Roman sculpture influences as well as simple lines and attention to the female body.[9] Her preferred media during this time was silk jersey and paper taffeta[6] While operating her haute couture fashion house under the name Alix, she first gained positive attention and critical acclaim for designing costumes in 1935 for Jean Giraudoux's play, "The Trojan War Will Not Take Place".[10] After receiving much applause for her theatrical costume designs, Grès became one of the leading designers of that time designing for many notable figures such as the Duchess of Windsor, Paloma Picasso, Grace Kelly, Marlene Dietrich, and Greta Garbo.[1][10]

Madame Grès era[]

In 1942, after marrying Russian painter, Serge Czerefkov, Grès began designing under the name "Madame Grès", a partial anagram of her husband's first name[9] During World War II, after creation of the Madame Grès label, German troops invaded Paris and soon occupied it. During the war, German forces demanded that Madame Grès design bleak and utilitarian clothing which was in complete contrast to her entire collection. Wives of German officers also requested Grès to design dresses for them, despite the fact that she was Jewish; she refused, and one of her gowns from this period features two small Stars of David sewn on the inside.[11] Grès defied their orders and continued to design garments that mirrored the colors of the French flag.[8] Consequentially, after defying German's orders, German forces ordered Grès's haute couture fashion house to be closed claiming her generous use of fabric during wartime as their reasoning.[10] After the closing of her first couture house, Grès fled to the Pyrenees and stayed there until Paris was liberated.[8] In 1944, with the closing of her first couture house, Grès began designing again and opened her second house returning to her now signature name, Madame Grès.[12] Throughout the 1940s, Madame Grès began constructing and perfecting her most notable garment, the elegantly draped Grecian goddess gowns.[9] These dresses could take anywhere up to three hundred hours to complete with each pleat being done by hand draping the cloth so the body shaped the dress.[1] Grès's signature dress perfectly captures who Grès was as a fashion designer. Her painstaking attention to detail, regard for the human body, and simplistic effects can be seen in each of her gowns.[2] In the 1950s, Grès experimented with simpler cuts and purer lines using ethnic traditions such as saris, kimono and serapes as her inspiration.[4] In addition, Grès tried her hands as tailoring women's suits over the course of the 1950s.[9] Grès's design focus remained mostly on her couture gowns throughout the rest of her career. Grès debuted her bestselling fragrance, Cabochard, in 1959 which translates to "stubborn".[1] In 1970, Grès strayed away from her signature draping style and highlighted naked flesh. She highlighted the flesh by constructing vertical peek-a-boo openings in the bodice.[10] In 1980, she launched her first two ready-to-wear collections in collaboration with the designer Peggy Huynh Kinh.[13] Then she reiterated in 1983, with a collection which manufacturing process she wanted to master from start to finish. Grès continued to design at her fashion house up until her 80s when she retired from the Grès fashion house in the late 1980s.[1] The final garment designed by Madame Grès was a swelling bodice dress ordered by Hubert de Givenchy in 1989.[5] Soon after Madame Grès retired from the couture fashion house, The House of Grès, began to suffer. In 1984, The House of Grès was bought by Bernard Tapie and then later Jacques Esterel. Due to unpaid rent, a bankruptcy petition was issued and the house's assets were liquidated and the fashion house was sold to Yagi Tsusho Limited, a Japanese company, in 1993 they hired Lloyd Klein as the head designer .[14]

Retirement and death[]

After retiring, Madame Grès lived life in even more secrecy than before. Due to poor business dealings regarding the licensing of her signature perfume, Cabochard, Madame Grès lost the fortune that she worked six decades to build leaving her living in poverty.[12] With help from friends, Hubert de Givenchy, Pierre Cardin, and Yves Saint Laurent, Grès was able to rent an apartment in the 16th arrondissement in Paris and continue sewing garments for friends.[1] In 1993, Grès's daughter, Anne, moved her to a retirement home in near Toulon, France. Grès died on 24 November 1993, less than a week before her 90th birthday.[14] Her death was made public a year later.[1]

Marriage and children[]

Madame Grès married Serge Czerefkov, a Russian painter, in the late 1930s.[9] The two had one daughter named Anne at some point during their marriage. Grès's daughter is most notable for concealing her mother's death in 1993 for over a year and forging Grès's handwriting in documents.[12]

Awards[]

  • Named Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1947[14]
  • Elected president of elected President of Chambre Syndicale of Paris Couture in 1972[4]
  • Dé d'Or (Golden Thimble) for dressmaking by Cartier in 1976[14]
  • New York University Creative Leadership in the Arts Award in 1978[14]
  • Named "Best in Italy” by the National Chamber of Italian Haute Couture[14]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Foreman, Katya (25 March 2011). "A Glimpse Of Grès". Women's Wear Daily.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Di Trocchio, Paola (4 September 2014). "Madame Grès: Couturier At Work". Fashion Theory.
  3. ^ Phelan, Hayley (3 May 2012). "25 Women Designers Who Changed Fashion Forever". Fashionista.com. Breaking Media, Inc. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Rose, Cynthia (6 June 2011). "Finding Fidelity Within the Fashion House". Crafts.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c Menkes, Suzy (18 April 2011). "Madame Grès as Sculptor". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Livingstone, David (17 November 1994). "The Graceful Drapings of Madame Grès New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art Honours the Last of the Great Couturieres". Globe & Mail.
  7. ^ "Fashion: Amazing drapes". 22 October 2011.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Hewins, Erica (23 June 2011). "Madame Grès Exhibition at Bourdelle Museum". Bonjour Paris. Paris New Media LLC. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Mendoza, Sandra (30 April 2011). "Alix Grès". Vintage Fashion Guild. Vintage Fashion Guild. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Sage, Alexandria (8 July 2011). "Madame Grès Paris Exhibit Is Ode to Draped Fashion". Reuters. Reuters. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  11. ^ "Important 1940s Madame Grès Grecian Goddess Silk Knit Gown in Black and Red".
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b c Cooke, Lynne (1 May 2008). "Madame Grès. New York". The Burlington Magazine.
  13. ^ Meyer-Stabley, Bertrand (2013). 12 couturières qui ont changé l'histoire. Paris: Pygmalion-Gérard Watelet. ISBN 978-2756407784.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Tan-Gan, Lulu (29 August 2014). "Madame Grès: The Sculptress of Fabric who Influenced Us". Inquirer.net. INQUIRER.net. Retrieved 13 April 2015.

Bibliography[]

  • Martin, Richard, and Harold Koda, Madame Grès, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1994 (available for download)
  • Patricia Mears, Madame Grès : Sphinx of Fashion, Yale University Press, 2008
  • Olivier Saillard, Madame Grès: Sculptural Fashion, Cannibal/Hannibal Publishers, 2012
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