Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski - Designer, Creative Director of Hermès

TheoG

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I'm eager to see this, hopefully she is able to differentiate herself from The Row abit and all of the other brands she has worked for in the past. But still continue the quality of Hermès.

Anticipating Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski’s Debut at Hermès

Tomorrow afternoon the world will meet a new Hermès, courtesy of creative director Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski—but that’s not all, it will also meet a new design talent. After holding lead design positions at The Row, from 2011 to 2014, and Céline, from 2008 to 2011, Vanhee-Cybulski’s first outing as the major creative force behind a collection will happen at Hermès and on the international stage. No pressure.

If her résumé is telling, she will bring a sense of refined, understated elegance to the French house, not unlike that of her predecessor Christophe Lemaire, who helmed the house from 2010 to 2014. What Vanhee-Cybulski is also likely to deliver, though, is a sense of the shocking, something that Hermès has lacked since the days of Jean Paul Gaultier’s or Martin Margiela’s reigns, from 2003 to 2010, and 1997 to 2003, respectively. From her time at Céline, The Row, and Maison Martin Margiela before that, Vanhee-Cybulski has surely learned that true luxury doesn’t just mean fancy materials; it means subversion. Phoebe Philo nails it season after season at Céline, with her fur-lined Birkenstocks, boob-print sneakers, and this Fall’s Mary Poppins-sized purses. Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen got the hang of it at The Row, too—really, what’s more perversive than an ostrich-skin backpack?

The house of Hermès, long synonymous with the utmost in luxury, could benefit from a little shot in the arm. And while many read Vanhee-Cybulski’s appointment as a safe choice, a Frenchwoman returning to a French house, she has the opportunity to invigorate the label with a smart take on femininity that her male predecessors lacked. Look around the Hermès website or its stores and you’ll find a sense of fun, of subversion, and of the unexpected—it is the house with bags named after both the eternal ingenue Jane Birkin and the original princess with an edge Grace Kelly, after all. Let’s see if Vanhee-Cybulski brings some of that complex beauty back with her debut collection tomorrow. ​​
style.com
 
Nadège Vanhée on Her First 10 Years at Hermès: “I Never Look Back”
BY NICOLE PHELPS

Nadège Vanhée left New York for Paris 10 years ago. She was a design director at The Row when Hermès called with the kind of offer you don’t say no to: the artistic director of women’s ready-to-wear. A decade later, though, the city still has its hooks in the French designer—once a New Yorker, always a New Yorker, as they say.

This week Vanhée is back in town to present a new collection—not resort, to be clear, but a sort of part-two of the fall collection she showed in February. “I have a special connection with New York,” Vanhée said at a makeshift studio on the west side, and “when I did this second chapter I felt it was relevant to show it here because it’s the perfect blend between a French and an American girl.”

The fall show—part one—was dedicated to horses and motorbikes, and it was the sexiest show of her Hermès tenure: lots of fitted leather and flashes of race car red. Tonight’s show isn’t an anniversary collection; still, her New York visit was cause for reflection. “I remember when I met Axel [Dumas, the executive chairman of Hermès], I said I really want to make the coat as relevant as the Birkin bag, and I think today we have customers who really discover the brand through the ready-to-wear, and that’s something which is quite exciting.” She took a break from fitting that ready-to-wear to talk mentors, the women role models who’ve led Hermès in the past, and how she maintains the house’s “attractive aura.”

I wanted to go to a house with really strong roots, which had strong stability. It was important for me; working for The Row, working for Celine, we were really at the beginning of something. I had to give a lot, because they were really starting their DNA. There was a strange feeling of going back to something familiar but at the same time super distant to me, because I hadn’t been there in years.

On what she learned at her jobs pre-Hermès:

Mary-Kate and Ashley? The sky’s the limit, the studio was very young and they showed me that if you want to do it, you do it. Especially coming from France where everything is ‘not possible’, it was nice to have the freedom of trying. Celine: the quest of working on a very strong assertive woman. I think what I learned from Martin, I remember one of our first meetings and he was like, [scoffs], ‘those archives.’ And I was like, ‘come on, Martin…’ and he said: ‘I don’t want to see anything from previous collections.’ And I think this has been imprinted on me: you look ahead, but you don’t ignore what you did and you also don’t give up your ideas.

On the designers who preceded her at Hermès:

Jean Paul Gaultier had a lot of freedom at the house. He was really experimental, he tried to expand the scope of the silhouette while still playing with ideas like fetishism. Martin Margiela before Gaultier was a sort of chiropractor or osteopath. The house had gone in every direction and he really helped to consolidate the fundamentals. And with Christophe Lemaire [her immediate predecessor], I didn’t want to look too much. Lemaire, Gaultier, and Margiela—they really brought their brand to the house and I really wanted to be more like a searcher. For me it was easier to go back to the first silhouettes that were designed in the ’20s and ’30s, and the work of Lola Prusac and Catherine de Karolyi. I naturally looked more toward the women who designed for Hermès. When you flick through the archives, lots of women have given a strong imprint to the house, even though the first clothes designed for women were men’s adaptations.

On being a woman designer:

Gender is tricky. When you’re a writer, you can write a female character if you’re male. I always get annoyed when we have to justify. It was Rebecca Solnit [the author of Men Explain Things to Me] who said that too: why do we have to justify anything? Yes, equality is great, but it doesn’t make me a better designer because I’m female. I do see this conversation about women designers happening. But women voting was like what 80 years ago [in France]. I mean, women having bank accounts in France only happened in the ’70s. What I see in fashion is just a reflection of that. There is a lot more to do.

On function over form:

The house is really about transmission. You acquire something and know you’re going to wear it and know you’re going to transmit to your children. There’s also this idea of anchor. People feel this is a stable object. I see lots of models, and they walk in with a vintage shirt from Hermès, and they say, ‘oh, I bought it in a vintage store,’ or ‘I got that scarf from my mom’ and they recontextualize it. There’s this Hermès motto: designing objects that really help the user everyday, this concept of being functional. And I think when you think about functionality, you’re always relevant.

On never looking back:

I don’t look back. I like to look ahead. There’s always things that we haven’t resolved and you push them further. Over these 10 years, you can definitely see an evolution in the silhouette. It has sharpened, but it’s playful and quite empathic. There’s a lot of different women who are quite fond of the collection and you put them in a room and they don’t look alike.

On what today’s show resolves:

It’s really the styling, the connection with the different metiers of the house: the jewelers, the accessoires, the hat, the scarf. We have different creative directors: Clémande [Burgevin Blachma, Fashion Accessories], and of course Pierre Hardy [Artistic Director of the shoe and jewelry collections]. There’s this great synergy. It’s not just the ready-to-wear. It’s a very interesting moment for Hermès, I think we have the right people at the right place.

Source: Vogue.com
 

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