Designers Switching Houses & Moving to New Brands | Page 27 | the Fashion Spot

Designers Switching Houses & Moving to New Brands

Taking Lanvin, a house all about femininity, in a gender-fluid direction makes no sense to me. But then, neither has anything else that's happened there in the past few years.

already tired and have no expections about this going to be awesome......sure I will wait and stay open minded. but I kind of have the feeling that the first collection will look like the boring stuff everyone else is doing now
 
I will be totally shocked if anything at Lanvin is ever awesome again ... I imagine this will be studied at fashion schools as a textbook example of how to drive a heritage brand into the ground.
 
Paul Surridge Said to Exit Roberto Cavalli

The designer joined the Italian brand as creative director in 2017 and his last collection is believed to be for fall 2019, shown in Milan last month.

By Luisa Zargani
with contributions from Samantha Conti
on March 21, 2019

According to a well-informed source in London, Paul Surridge has resigned, or is close to taking that step, leaving his role as creative director of the Roberto Cavallibrand. An announcement is expected to come as early as this week.

Sources said the designer over the past few months has grown increasingly frustrated because of the lack of investment in the development and refurbishment of the store network as well as in marketing and communications. He is also said to feel the design team has not been supported, as resources have been scarce.

“The decision last summer to look for an external investor and, more recently, to not provide any more funding have made the original project impossible, and therefore triggered Paul’s decision to look elsewhere,” said one source.

Committed to chief executive officer Gian Giacomo Ferraris and his team, Surridge agreed to stay on to design and present the spring 2019 and fall 2019 collections. However, sources now say that Surridge has been approached for another project and wants to distance himself from the company in order to be in the position to evaluate freely the next step in his career.

The Roberto Cavalli company had no comment on the rumors.

Surridge joined the Florence-based brand in 2017 and his first collection bowed for spring 2018. He succeeded Peter Dundas, who exited the company in Oct. 2016.

Born in England, and a graduate of London’s Central Saint Martins, Surridge was previously creative consultant at Acne Studios, with responsibility for coordination of the men’s wear collections. Before that, he was creative director of Z Zegna from 2011 to 2014.

Earlier, Surridge was design director men at Jil Sander, reporting to then creative director Raf Simons. This is where he met Ferraris. Surridge honed his skills at Calvin Klein and Burberry, working with Christopher Bailey from 2003 to 2007.

Ferraris has spearheaded the turnaround of Cavalli since his arrival in May 2016, reorganizing the company to keep a lid on costs. As reported, unions earlier this months expressed their concern for the future of the company and its employees in Tuscany.

As reported, designer Philipp Plein is rumored to be especially keen to take control of the brand, eyeing an overhaul, and looking to leave his own mark on the label. In addition to his own namesake brand, which marks 20 years in business in 2019, the designer controls Plein Sport and Billionaire.

Sources say the fund Blue Star Alliance, which has investments in Tahari, Bebe and Catherine Malandrino, is also interested in the brand.

Clessidra took control of Cavalli in 2015, but has been looking to exit the fashion business, according to sources. In May 2016, Italmobiliare SpA, the publicly listed investment group owned by the Pesenti family took control of Clessidra for roughly 20 million euros. Italmobiliare holds and manages a diversified portfolio of investments and equity interests worth more than 2 billion euros.

WWD.com
 
That was just to be expected, no surprise at all there...I would add that Surridge was an odd choice for a brand like Cavalli from the very start, I guess CEO Ferrari wanted to give a more contemporary, polished spin to the brand (pretty much like he had done at Versace before) but "Cavalli" and "polish" is just an oxymoron never to materialize in real life.
 
If my brand was close to be taken over by Philipp Plein... I'd get out of there as fast as I could, too. Good for him.

Right! That would have been justifiable enough. But I do think the source is making valid claims. Cavalli is less present than Lanvin right now, and I mean in general.
 
I saw this last week, didn't see it posted here. Pretty abrupt.

Julie de Libran Exits Sonia Rykiel After Five Years as Artistic Director

Julie de Libran and Sonia Rykiel have parted ways, the French company announced today.

Sonia Rykiel, a brand synonymous with Left Bank joie de vivre and stripes, celebrated its 50th anniversary in spectacular fashion last year. Bananarama were hired to perform at the Fall 2018 show, and Spring 2019 coincided with the rechristening of a Paris street as Allée Sonia Rykiel in honor of the house founder, who died in 2016. The staging of that collection showcased the label’s close ties to the neighborhood: de Libran’s son walked in the show, as did other children. In July, a one-off couture collection demonstrating what de Libran called the “savoir faire of Rykiel’s amazing atelier” was presented side-by-side with a limited edition series of sweaters created by friends of the label, many of whom the designer dressed during her nearly five years as artistic director at the company. The brand has always known how to throw a good party: For Rykiel’s 40th anniversary in 2008, a who’s who of international designers, from Karl Lagerfeld to Jean Paul Gaultier to Rodarte’s Mulleavy sisters, designed clothes in her honor.

De Libran hailed from Louis Vuitton, where one of her specialties was red-carpet dresses for celebrities. Sofia Coppola was subsequently a regular front-row site at her Sonia Rykiel shows. The designer made a splash with her first collection for the house circa Spring 2015, booking the then runway newcomer Gigi Hadid for a show at the landmark Boulevard Saint Germain shop and updating Rykiel’s signature striped knits. Shortly thereafter, the store was remodeled with row upon row of well-stocked lacquer-red bookshelves—the St. Germain neighborhood is famously associated with French intellectuals and artists—and a New York renovation soon followed.

Recent shows have been set at Paris’s École des Beaux-Arts, but de Libran presented Fall 2019 in a showroom earlier this month, an early indication, perhaps, of today’s news. Her final collection for the label is stocked with on-brand stripes, timely pantsuits, and innovative knits. “It’s not about fashion,” de Libran said, “it’s about the iconic values of the house.” Thanking de Libran for her service, a company press release stated: “Management is working on defining the future organization of the studio to carry on the development of the brand based on her creative strength and know-how.” Whatever Julie de Libran’s next moves are, we’ll be watching closely.
vogue.com
 
^^
It’s a pity because her last collection was her best ever but at this point, Rykiel needs a real fresh talent who is fearless. They have an amazing heritage in knitwear, they should push it!
 
I'm not surprised about Paul Surridge wanting to get off the sinking ship that is Roberto Cavalli ASAP.

While he was never a natural fit for the house, I think he still managed to use his time there to cement his standing as a very capable head designer with a now much wider spectrum than the men's tailoring background that he is known for. As the article suggested, it is to be expected that he will be snatched up soon, hopefully at a place where his personal point of view is closer aligned with the house he will work at.
 
I loved the last collection Paul Surridge did for Cavalli. It was sleek and modern and had prints reminiscent of the prints that Cavalli did. He did however feel like an odd choice for the house since he's more into tailoring which is not the first thing you think of when it comes to Cavalli.
 
Eva Cavalli loved a good pantsuit, I don't ever recall her wearing anything but pantsuits to be perfectly honest. If anything at all, you got the feeling that his approach to Cavalli was 'studied' and a bit too surgical. It didn't feel like he was warming up to the mediterranean sizzle (or Euro trash maximalism) that so much defines Cavalli - Not that I'd say it's something so desperately missed in fashion right now but without the sensuality and the heat, it's not really Cavalli.
 
He wasn’t good for Cavalli anyway. Cavalli is more than animal prints and sexy dresses, it’s a mood, a lifestyle. The man lived the life of his clients... You need to understand that in order to do it.
Today Cavalli is like Ungaro and Azzaro...Lost!
If Plein take over, I might simply not care about it.

I would love for Alexandre Vauthier to take over one of this house.

The sons of Mr Cavalli are quite talented themselves. They can do the job.

But at this point, i’m sure they keep the thing going because of licences contracts...like Galliano. It’s a pity because it has a potential.
 
Statement confirming the departure from Paul Surridge's instagram

 
I gotta give it to him, that's a very classy way to leave. There have clearly been disagreements and I don't think the tenure was successful at all, so it's probably for the best.
 
Bill Gaytten is leaving John Galliano. His right hand will continue as CD with her team.
 
I gotta give it to him, that's a very classy way to leave. There have clearly been disagreements and I don't think the tenure was successful at all, so it's probably for the best.

Ugh, I hope they would shut this brand down!
 
Does anyone actually buy Galliano anymore? I know the underwear used to sell, but what else do they have to offer? Rather then shutting it down they should just sell it and be done with it.
 

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