The Mercury News

Fashion world mourns Lagerfeld.

- By Vanessa Friedman

Karl Lagerfeld, the most prolific designer of the 20th and 21st centuries and a man whose career formed the prototype of the modern luxury fashion industry, died Tuesday in Paris.

Though his birth year was a matter of some dispute, Lagerfeld, who lived in Paris, was generally thought to be 85. His death was announced by Chanel, with which he had long been associated.

“More than anyone I know, he represents the soul of fashion: restless, forward-looking and voraciousl­y attentive to our changing culture,” Anna Wintour, editor of American Vogue, said of Lagerfeld when presenting him with the Outstandin­g Achievemen­t Award at the British Fashion Awards in 2015.

Creative director of Chanel since 1983 and Fendi since 1965, and founder of his own line, Lagerfeld was the definition of a fashion polyglot, able to speak the language of many different brands at the same time (not to mention many languages themselves: The German-born designer read in English, French, German and Italian).

In his 80s, when most of his peers were retiring to their yachts or country estates, he was designing an average of 14 new collection­s a year, ranging from couture to the high street — and not counting collaborat­ions and special projects. “Ideas come to you when you work,” he said backstage before a Fendi show at age 83.

His signature combinatio­ns of “high fashion and high camp” attracted admirers like Rihanna; Princess

Caroline of Monaco; Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund; and Julianne Moore.

Lagerfeld was also a photograph­er, whose work was exhibited at the Pinacothèq­ue de Paris; a publisher, having founded his own imprint for Steidl, Edition 7L; and the author of a popular 2002 diet book, “The Karl Lagerfeld Diet,” about how he had lost 92 pounds.

His greatest calling, however, was as the orchestrat­or of his own myth.

A self-identified “caricature,” with his dark glasses, powdered ponytail, black jeans, fingerless gloves, starched collars, Chrome Hearts jewelry and obsessive Diet Coke consumptio­n, he achieved such a level of global fame — and controvers­y — that a $200

Karl Barbie doll, created in collaborat­ion with the toymaker Mattel, sold out in less than an hour in 2014.

He was variously referred to as a “genius,” the “kaiser” and “overrated.” His contributi­on to fashion was not in creating a new silhouette, as designers like Cristobal Balenciaga, Christian Dior and Coco Chanel herself did.

Rather, he created a new kind of designer: the shapeshift­er.

That is to say, he was the creative force who lands at the top of a heritage brand and reinvents it by identifyin­g its sartorial semiology and then pulls it into the present with a healthy dose of disrespect and a dollop of pop culture.

Not that he put it that way exactly. What he said was: “Chanel is an institutio­n, and you have to treat

an institutio­n like a whore — and then you get something out of her.”

This approach has become almost quotidian in the industry, but before Lagerfeld was hired at Chanel, when the brand was fading into staid irrelevanc­e kept aloft on a raft of perfume and cosmetics, it was a new and startling idea.

That he dared act on it, and then kept doing so with varying degrees of success for decades, transforme­d not only the fortunes of Chanel (now said to have revenues of more than $4 billion a year) but also his own profile.

And it cleared a new path for designers who came after, from Tom Ford (who likewise transforme­d Gucci) to John Galliano (Dior), Riccardo Tisci (Givenchy, Burberry) and Tomas Maier (Bottega Veneta).

 ??  ??
 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Karl Lagerfeld at Saks Fifth Avenue showing one of his snug-waisted styles, a silk taffeta skirt and blouse, in New York in 1976. Lagerfeld, 85, died Tuesday in Paris.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Karl Lagerfeld at Saks Fifth Avenue showing one of his snug-waisted styles, a silk taffeta skirt and blouse, in New York in 1976. Lagerfeld, 85, died Tuesday in Paris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States