From Marc to Raf?
 Now that Marc Jacobs appears to be out of the  picture at Christian Dior, industry sources said the French fashion  house is closing in on a contract with acclaimed Belgian designer Raf  Simons to become its next couturier. 
 A deal with Simons, 43,  has yet to be concluded, and sources cautioned that several key details  must be worked out. Chief among them would be a start date, given that  Simons, creative director at Jil Sander since 2005, would have to  unravel his contract with that Milan-based house, which is understood to  have been extended recently for an unknown duration.
 What’s  more, given the rapid cycle of collections at a big couture house, it’s  unlikely any newly installed designer would be able to produce a  collection in time for Paris Fashion Week in March, let alone the  couture in January.
 Dior’s design studio, headed by Bill  Gaytten, has been producing couture and ready-to-wear collections since  last March, when Dior ousted its longtime designer John Galliano in the  wake of his racist and anti-Semitic outbursts at a Paris cafe.
 Dior officials could not be reached for comment on Monday.
 Should Dior secure Simons, it would mark the latest step up in an  impressive career for the men’s wear maverick, who added women’s wear to  his design repertoire only when he arrived at Sander.
It would  also suggest Dior management is prepared to nudge the storied fashion  house in a more modernist direction, given Simons’ predilection for  minimalism and futurism. 
 Galliano, who brought spectacular  showmanship and epic, romantic inspirations to Dior during his 15-year  tenure, had recently been devoted to more ladylike dressing, turning out  collections inspired by the founder’s earlier work and focusing on  iconic styles such as its “bar” jacket and grand eveningwear. Dior  presented his first collection in 1947.
 Simons, too, has  recently shown a fascination with midcentury couture, incorporating  ballgowns — and even bridalwear — into recent collections, winning him  rave reviews from fashion critics.
 Simons has been on the radar  of LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, sister company of Dior, for some  time. When Michael Kors wrapped up his stint as the designer of LVMH’s  Celine house back in 2004, Simons was among candidates that advisers of  luxury titan Bernard Arnault had been touting.
 In recent years,  Simons’ fashion star has continued to rise given a string of hit women’s  shows for Sander. His spring-summer 2012 collection reimagined ideas  from the Fifties into hyper-chic fashions for today.
 According  to sources, Simons had also been approached by Yves Saint Laurent, which  has yet to indicate if it will extend its relationship with Stefano  Pilati, who succeeded Tom Ford as the house’s chief designer in 2004.  Pilati’s latest contract is due to expire in March.
 Born in  Neerpelt, Belgium, Simons moved to Genk and obtained a degree in  industrial and furniture design in 1991. He segued from furniture into  fashion and launched a youth-oriented, street-inspired collection of  men’s wear in 1995.
 He started showing it in Paris two years  later, and quickly caused a sensation with his skinny tailoring, street  casting, and such imposing runway venues such as La Grande Arche de la  Défense.
 A designer with an intellectual bent, Simons is also an  enthusiastic fan of contemporary art — echoing Dior’s earlier  background as an art dealer. 
 At Sander, he has elaborated on  the German brand’s esthetic, adding dresses and eveningwear to its  signature tailoring. “I knew in the long run I couldn’t only think about  minimalism and purism,” he said in a 2008 interview. 
 For his  spring 2011 collection, he invoked the grandeur of couture and the  extravagant style of Elisabeth of Bavaria, the iconic royal, a riposte  to other designers who had muscled in on minimalism. “It almost  challenged me to the opposite, to do the idea of maximalism,” he told  WWD at the time.
 Earlier this year, Simons was an honoree at Fashion Group International’s Night of the Stars in New York.
 Simons emerged as the new front-runner to succeed Galliano after talks  to move Marc Jacobs over from Louis Vuitton came to a halt last month.
 It is understood Dior has considered a wide swath of potential  candidates, from young to mature talents, long insisting it would take  all the time it needs to find a designer strongly matched to Dior’s DNA  and ambitions.