Discussion: Who Should Be The Creative Director of Chanel?

Good for him!! I just for all the love of everything hope he delivers something worth looking at… Personally it’s a very boring choice but that’s just my opinion.. Now we can all move on from this Saga!! We are tired and exhausted!! They dragged the hell out of this only to give us a Bland… No Sorry meant “Blazy”
 
Chanel made the right choice, it was time to embrace modernity.
Happy for Blazy and excited to see his debut. I wonder what the model casting will look like when Blazy takes charge.
 
Anyway. Happy for Fashion. I think Bruno saying the 2 year period is basically saying he has 2 years to make it work or he's gone. So I fear we may be back here in 2027.
 

Why Chanel Chose Matthieu Blazy​

The designer, fresh off a star turn leading Bottega Veneta, succeeds Karl Lagerfeld and Virginie Viard as artistic director at the French couture and beauty giant, the industry’s most coveted creative post. Fashion president Bruno Pavlovsky breaks down the logic behind the historic choice.
Matthieu Blazy

Matthieu Blazy has been named artistic director of fashion collections at Chanel, opening a new era for the French couture and beauty giant. (Getty Images)

By BOF
12 December 2024

PARIS — Matthieu Blazy has been named artistic director of fashion collections at Chanel, opening a new era for the French couture and beauty giant.
Blazy joins Chanel following a three-year stint at Kering’s Bottega Veneta, where his collections celebrated the brand’s fusion of traditional Italian craftsmanship, materials innovation and a kaleidoscope of cultural references, attracting industry respect and an eclectic cast of A-list muses.
Blazy succeeds Virginie Viard, a longtime deputy of Karl Lagerfeld who exited the brand in June after five years as artistic director. Previously, Lagerfeld, who died in 2019, led the brand for 36 years, fuelling the 114 year-old label’s transformation into a global megabrand.
“Matthieu became an obvious choice for the brand as we came to understand his talent, his personality, his groundedness, his culture,” Chanel’s fashion president Bruno Pavlovsky told BoF in an interview ahead of the announcement. “The interview process was truly inspiring as we grew to know him: his vision for creation, his modernity, his respect for and commitment to products and the women who surround and inspire him.”

With nearly $20 billion in annual revenue, fashion’s second-biggest brand doesn’t need a “revolution” so to speak, according to Pavlovsky
. But Chanel is nonetheless positioning the hire as a historic, transformative move for the company.

“We didn’t choose Matthieu to just ‘do Chanel,’ we chose him so he could push the boundaries of what Chanel is, for the future,” Pavlovsky said. “He will bring his modernity, his way of working — Chanel is ready to let itself be transported.”

Blazy is set to join Chanel by April 2025, ahead of a debut collection slated for next September.


Blazy’s Path​

The designer, aged 40, cut his teeth as a young creative director leading the anonymous studio at Maison Margiela following founder Martin Margiela’s exit in 2011. He went on to work under Phoebe Philo at Celine and Raf Simons at Calvin Klein before joining Bottega Veneta in 2020, initially as ready-to-wear director under Daniel Lee.

As creative director of Bottega Veneta since November 2021, Blazy has become known for runway collections that put cutting-edge craft in the spotlight, as well as a kaleidoscopic mix of references to art, design and cinema. Creating surprising garments from inspirations as banal as an oxford shirt or jeans — using ultra-realistic trompe-l’œil effects to render those casual sportswear staples in printed leather, for example — was one of Blazy’s signatures.

During his tenure, the brand’s ambassadors included masters in their fields spanning ages and nationalities: actresses Michelle Yeoh and Julianne Moore; rapper and style icon A$AP Rocky and Priscilla leading man Jacob Elordi.

Blazy’s vision of fashion isn’t about “changing just to change,” Pavlovsky said. “There is a real depth to what Matthieu does, from the shows to the products, to his way of talking about them.”

Broad Mandate​

Blazy’s appointment follows a lengthy search as Chanel worked to identify the right designer to reinvigorate its brand message and provide added creative thrust to its vast operation.

Chanel’s artistic director oversees six runway shows per year across ready-to-wear and couture, as well as red carpet projects and commercial collections that include everything from $500 hair clips to $10,000 handbags, capsules for ski and sand. Its designer also usually plays a hands-on role steering the brand’s marketing: Karl Lagerfeld shot many campaigns himself; Viard worked in close partnership with the photography duo Inez and Vinoodh to refresh and add variety to its image.

“There’s an important collective dimension to what we do at Chanel,” Pavlovsky said. “Matthieu stays true to his own strong, seductive personality — he will bring his exceptionalism to the brand — but at the same time he has a real vision of the collective. We never stopped speaking about the teams.”

Reviving Momentum​

Chanel’s revenues have surged in recent years as the luxury sector boomed following the coronavirus pandemic. The company reported revenues of $19.7 billion in 2023, up more than 75 percent over five years. Prices surged as well, making the once-untouchable brand an easy target for complaints about everything from quality (often called out as not up-to-par with the increased cost) to design (still commercially resonant, but sometimes seen as a bit stale).

Its new designer will need to advance the brand’s creative message while still serving clients with products that are desirable — and wearable — enough to justify the splurge. That’s a bigger challenge than usual as the luxury sector navigates a downturn in demand across key markets. Chanel has not reported figures since 2023, but sector bellwether LVMH saw fashion sales fall 7 percent in the third quarter, while Richemont’s sales slipped 1 percent.

Chanel has had a “more difficult” year along with the broader sector, although its sales are “just a bit, not a lot, less good than 2023,” Pavlovsky said.

At a travel show in Hangzhou, China last week, Pavlovsky was reassured to see that despite an economic crisis in the key market, “a lot of clients are still extremely passionate about the brand.”

Under Blazy, Bottega Veneta was a rare bright spot as the luxury industry entered a downturn, continuing to post modest growth even as it cut back on its exposure to wholesale. Blazy’s rigorous approach to product development will position the house to keep up with a “high demand for meaning and value,” among clients, he added.

When clients get to see and learn about products up-close, as during events like Chanel’s travel shows, “that sublimates the collection; it just multiplies clients’ interest,” Pavlovsky said.

“It’s up to brands to do that deep work on their products, and to engage the clients. If business has been more difficult lately, it’s a good wake-up call for everyone,” he added. “We have to keep creating something real.”
 
Valley of the Belges. This might just be their collective peak, Alaia and Prada upping their game as we speak.
I'm curious about what complete brand imagery overhaul Chanel will go through under him. As demonstrated by Bottega campaigns he's got a light touch. No I&V for sure but don't think he'll replicate his BV there either.
 
Valley of the Belges. This might just be their collective peak, Alaia and Prada upping their game as we speak.
I'm curious about what complete brand imagery overhaul Chanel will go through under him. As demonstrated by Bottega campaigns he's got a light touch. No I&V for sure but don't think he'll replicate his BV there either.
Watch him hire Juergen Teller to shoot 50,000$ couture jackets with his latest iPhone.
 

Will Matthieu Blazy turn around CHANEL?​

Posted On December 13, 2024 CPP-LUXURY

CHANEL has appointed Matthieu Blazy as its artistic director of the house’s fashion activities, responsible for all haute couture, ready-to-wear and accessories collections, the house announced on Thursday, putting an end to months of intense speculation. He will report to Bruno Pavlovsky, president of Chanel Fashion and Chanel SA.

While his appointment may seem ‘politically correct’ Blazy may turn out to be too docile in his new role at Chanel, far from the calibre of Karl Lagerfeld or John Galliano. Since the passing of Karl Lagerfel, Chanel collections have become repetitive and predictable across all lines, especially Haute Couture, where historical rival Schiaparelli has taken a major lead under Daniel Rosebery.
Alain Wertheimer, global executive chairman, and Leena Nair, global CEO of Chanel, called the designer in a joint statement “one of the most gifted designers of his generation”. “His vision and talent will reinforce the energy of the brand and our position as a leader in luxury. Under Bruno Pavlovsky’s leadership, we are confident that Matthieu Blazy will continue to shape what’s next and write a new page in Chanel’s creation,” they said.
“I am convinced that he will be able to play with the codes and heritage of the house, through an ongoing dialogue with the studio, our ateliers, and our maisons d’art,” Pavlovsky said. “His audacious personality, his innovative and powerful approach to creation, as well as his dedication to craftsmanship and beautiful materials, will take Chanel in exciting new directions.”

Following the sudden departure of Virginie Viard from Chanel in June 2024, the job has remained vacant, culminating in an avalanche of rumours surrounding who would end up with what is arguably the most coveted job in fashion. In the past six months, designers from Hedi Slimane to Simon Porte Jacquemus were considered front runners. Jonathan Anderson of LOEWE has not been a front runner at Chanel as he prepares to take on DIOR, a sister brand within LVMH.

Blazy, who joins from Bottega Veneta will be in charge with delivering 10 collections per year (two ready-to-wear, two couture, two pre-collections, one cruise, one Métiers d’art, plus Coco Beach and Coco Neige). The Paris-born, 40-year-old designer graduated from Brussels’s La Cambre in 2007 and has held designer stints at Raf Simons and Maison Margiela, where he earned his couture stripes designing the brand’s ‘Artisanal’ line and gained recognition for his work.

In 2014, he became senior designer at Céline, under Phoebe Philo, before reuniting with Raf Simons at Calvin Klein as VP of design for womenswear and menswear from 2016 to 2019.
In 2020, he became Daniel Lee’s right hand at Bottega Veneta as design director.
After Lee’s sudden exit, he was appointed creative director in 2021 and presented his first collection for the Italian house in February 2022.
 
When Karl started at Chanel he wasn't KARL as we knew him. Don't we have to be realistic at some point? IIRC Karl's first collection for Chanel wasn't perfect. Also lol... mentioning "historic" rival Schiaparelli in that article... ummm... are we really going to pretend it wasn't revived? Embarrassing.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Forum Statistics

Threads
212,657
Messages
15,194,715
Members
86,635
Latest member
jm12349
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "058526dd2635cb6818386bfd373b82a4"
<-- Admiral -->