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- <text id=89TT0747>
- <title>
- Mar. 20, 1989: Fashion Without Frontiers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 20, 1989 Solving The Mysteries Of Heredity
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LIVING, Page 94
- Fashion Without Frontiers
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Two top Italian designers defect to France
- </p>
- <p> Pass the smelling salts: Valentino has deserted Italy for
- France. And that's not all. Romeo Gigli will take his
- pseudo-cerebral fashions out of Milan and plunk them down in
- the middle of the Paris runways. Desertion! Infamy! Tribal
- politics! Frets Beppe Modenese, program organizer of the just
- concluded Milan fashion week: "Both Valentino and Gigli have
- done big damage to the Italian fashion image."
- </p>
- <p> So have their clothes, but then that is a matter of taste.
- By choosing to absent themselves from their home turf, Valentino
- and Gigli have sent the kind of political signal that is beyond
- debate: Paris is fashion central, and Milan is just a big
- backyard. This is not news to the French, of course, who
- responded to the story of the traveling Italians with the kind
- of equanimity that barely skirts smugness. "Paris is still No.
- 1 in fashion," says Jacques Mouclier, president of the Chambre
- Syndicale, which sponsors the twice-yearly ready-to-wear fashion
- shows held in the jammed courtyard of the Louvre. "The Italians
- have come because they've realized they can't do without us. The
- Milan ready-to-wear draws far fewer journalists than the shows
- in Paris. Need I say more?"
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps not. Gigli and Valentino have already said plenty.
- "I don't believe in frontiers," reflects Gigli. Explains Carla
- Sozzani, a business associate of the designer's: "Romeo's all
- for 1992 and a united Europe." Valentino has announced some
- similar geopolitical aims. "I am going to Paris as an Italian
- designer to speak for Italy," he says. "I will never betray my
- country, but I need the challenge to do better." Elaborates
- Giancarlo Giammetti, Valentino's partner: "Rome is becoming a
- very provincial market, and it's simply not stimulating the
- creator."
- </p>
- <p> The Creator may have finished his big job in six days, but
- Giammetti's creator works full time to fuel his fashion empire
- (estimated wholesale haul for 1989: $600 million), and has for
- some time been trying to seem like an internationalist.
- Valentino's ready-to-wear has been on view in Paris for the past
- 14 years without attracting a commotion. Gigli is looking for
- an imprimatur, separating himself from the excellent elegances
- of Milan in favor of the more experimental company in Paris. The
- intrepid Japanese designers show their stuff in Paris; so do the
- haut trendies like Jean-Paul Gaultier and Claude Montana. The
- company is faster there than in Milan, where Giorgio Armani,
- Italy's premier talent, casts a very long shadow indeed.
- "Presumptuous," is the way Armani characterizes Gigli's move,
- adding, "He may want to be international, but his move is
- premature."
- </p>
- <p> Milan has been bucking Paris and all its traditions for
- over a decade, but the City of Light still holds a clear lead.
- Milan staked its claim in a time of flux, when the fashion
- establishment, still shell-shocked by the '60s, was not quite
- so restrictive. Italy came on with a rush of fresh talent:
- dazzling designers (like the Missonis), some fine hands (like
- Gianfranco Ferre) and some naughty boys (like Gianni Versace).
- But, in Armani, it produced just a single world beater. Paris,
- on the other hand, can still offer a wider spectrum: sumptuous
- Saint Laurent, engaging Lagerfeld, generative Miyake, fast-flash
- Gaultier, ebullient Patrick Kelly. As ever, it is center stage,
- the arena on which designers want most to play, especially if
- they are coming on (like Gigli) or consolidating (like
- Valentino).
- </p>
- <p> There was also some suggestion around the Milan shows last
- week that Gigli had left in a bit of a huff, having lost a
- wrangle over a choice scheduling spot to Ferre, whose revenues
- ($390 million in 1988) currently carry a good deal more clout
- than Gigli's (under $10 million). "One day I just woke up and
- thought I'd like to show in Paris," shrugs Gigli, perhaps
- forgetting that Paris, for other Italian designers (like
- Simonetta), turned into a nightmare that left them
- disenfranchised, with no singular creative identity. "I
- shouldn't yet take all this for more than a one-season wonder,"
- said Suzy Menkes, the savvy fashion editor of the International
- Herald Tribune. "All designers are prima donnas to some extent,
- and I expect Gigli just wanted to teach the Milanese organizers
- a lesson."
- </p>
- <p> For his part, Valentino was playing the diplomat. "It's a
- great joy for me to show in Paris," he said. "I'll certainly
- still show in Rome, but couture is my metier, and I learned it
- in Paris. But I always keep my Italian accent when speaking
- French, and so do my clothes." By the time some State Department
- of Fashion has worked out all the coded signals and careful
- contradictions in that dispatch, the dust will have settled.
- There is always a lot of it around during fashion season anyway,
- especially when the clothes aren't good enough to clear the air.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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