Pascale Mussard

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Pascale Mussard (née Pascale Siegrist, b. 15 September 1957) is the great-great-great-granddaughter of saddle maker Thierry Hermès;[1] the dynasty is today essentially held within the Dumas, Guerrand, and Puech families. She has been the co-artistic director of Hermès, the manufacturer and purveyor of clothing, furniture, and housewares, established in 1857 in Paris, France. Pascal Mussard formerly held the position of co-artistic director with her cousin Pierre-Alexis Dumas.

Early life and career[]

In her youth, Mussard defied the ban against family members' spending extensive time in the ateliers of Hermès.[2] Interested in science and often visiting the Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie in Paris's Parc de la Villette. "I even did my first internship as a student in a ball mill in Germany," she reminisces with amusement.[3][2]

After studying law and business at the European Business School London, she worked in the export department of a commercial printer. "I wanted to prove myself elsewhere," she has said.[4] Fortunately, uncle Jean-Louis Dumas, the head of the firm as well as the artistic director, assumed that she had talent and abilities and, in 1978, arranged for her to be a poisson pilote in the Nicole De Vesian styling agency. (Poisson pilote, or "pilot fish" in English, is someone who leads the way under delicate circumstances.)[5]

Subsequently, Pascale became the head fabric buyer for women's ready-to-wear at Hermès, which lead to her becoming a press attaché and thence head of advertising and public relations. These assignments were followed by her creating a department of exhibitions. Subsequently, she set up and directed the shop-windows department.

Mid-career[]

In 2002, Jean-Louis Dumas made Mussard his assistant and the delegate artistic director alongside Pierre-Alexis Dumas.

Until her activities as the co-artistic director ceased in 2011, Mussard had been in charge of the accessories and leather-goods sectors of the firm, which still include the "Kelly" and "Birkin" bags. Mussard worked toward bringing the firm into a sustainable future.

She and Pierre-Alexis Dumas, who is twelve years her junior, had been successful in dismissing the naysayers' claim that the brand would fall from grace when her uncle and Pierre-Alexis's father, Jean-Louis Dumas, died in 2010.

Accolades include Mussard's being designated one of the "Ten Women to Watch in Europe" by The Wall Street Journal in 2008.[citation needed]

Present activities[]

From 2009, Mussard, who is the mother of three sons, two of which are twins (Maxime, Dimitri, Adriaan) asserted that modern luxury is a "reinvention" and is becoming more sustainably focused. She is referencing her current duties as the director of the "Petit h" division of Hermès that some call a labo-atelier. However, "we are not an art gallery", she asserts.[6][7][8] The endeavor is an uptake on recycling. For example, discarded animal skins from the "Kelly" and "Birkin" bags, other leatherwear, and various elements, such as handles, hardware, and discarded ceramics, are being reborn as other objects with new lives.[9][10]

"My playground is Hermès.... Let’s see what we can reinvent", says Mussard, who grew up as something of an Eloise in the company's ateliers according to Time magazine's Marion Hume.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Marion Hume, "The Female Economy / Pascale Mussard: Luxe Environmentalist," Time, 9 September 2009
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Amanda Friedman, "Hermès's Second LIfe," Departures http://www.departures.com/articles/hermes-second-life
  3. ^ "Pascale Mussard et Pierre-Alexis Dumas: Les Classiques modernes" (quotation here translated from the French). Les Echoes, Série Limitée no. 49, 8 December 2006
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Marion Hume, "Pascale Mussard: Luxe Environmentalist". Time, 1 September 2009
  5. ^ "Pascale Mussard et Pierre-Alexis Dumas : Les Classiques modernes" (quotation here translated from the French). Les Echoes, Série Limitée no. 49, 8 December 2006
  6. ^ "Portrait—Pascale Mussard: Le petit h d'Hermès," Milk Décoration 21, Sept.-oct.-nov. 2015
  7. ^ "Portrait—Pascale Mussard: Le petit h d'Hermès," Milk Décoration 21, Sept.-oct.-nov. 2015
  8. ^ "Petit h at Hermès: Don't Thorw Anything Away!," Style Bubble, 6 November 2013
  9. ^ Amanda Friedman, "Hermès's Second LIfe," Departures
  10. ^ Cathy Horyn, "Waste Not, Want It", The New York Times, 29 September 2011
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