Toronto Star

Rihanna and LVMH are taking a break

French luxury group puts star’s Fenty fashion line on hold during pandemic

- VANESSA FRIEDMAN AND ELIZABETH PATON

Is this the end of the celebrity-high-fashion-designer experiment? There is, it turns out, something even Rihanna cannot do: sell high fashion clothes during a pandemic.

LVMH, the French luxury group, announced the Fenty fashion house to great fanfare in 2019. But Wednesday, they revealed that, with Rihanna, they had “jointly made the decision to put on hold the readyto-wear activity line, based in Europe, pending better conditions.”

Translated, that means the luxury fashion arm of the Fenty empire (an empire that separately includes the lingerie line Savage x Fenty and Fenty cosmetics and skin care) will no longer produce any collection­s, even though it is not officially closed and Rihanna remains a part of LVMH.

Discussion­s are underway with the brand’s employees about their future, although Bastien Renard, the label’s managing director, is remaining in position. The news was first reported by Women’s Wear Daily.

Although it comes on the heels of a successful $115-million (U.S.) fundraisin­g round for Savage x Fenty by L Catterton, the private equity firm connected to LVMH, the suspension of the Fenty ready-to-wear is a rare failure for the world’s largest luxury group, which also owns Louis Vuitton, Dior and Celine. It is also the rare misstep for one of the world’s most effective celebrity polymaths: a reflection of both the tepid market reaction to the Fenty collection­s, as well as the wider ongoing impact of the pandemic on the luxury sector.

And it is a reminder that just because someone has an enormous cultural following and no-holds-barred taste, it does not mean they will make great, original clothes.

Only the second luxury fashion maison that LVMH ever attempted to build from scratch (the first was Christian Lacroix, which LVMH opened in 1987 and sold in 2005), Fenty was initially presented as the group’s foray into the future: a new brand, run by a Black woman with great style and popular influence but no formal old-fashioned design training, that would eschew the calcified system of runway shows for regular drops, and focus on digital direct-to-consumer sales and communicat­ion. It seemed like a slam dunk. Starting a new luxury fashion house from scratch is enormously expensive for any investor and usually takes time. But 2020 was the worst year for the luxury sector in history. While LVMH, the largest luxury group by sales, reported a sales rebound in recent months, largely fuelled by Chinese consumers, lockdowns continue to cause disruption and damped group profit. LVMH said last month that its profit in 2020 was 4.7 billion euros, declining by roughly a third from 2019.

And unlike some other LVMH brands that have proved resilient during the downturn, like Louis Vuitton and Dior, the bold experiment that was the Fenty clothing line struggled to find its footing, something that Jean-Jacques Guiony, LVMH chief financial officer, alluded to in October on a call reporting the group’s third-quarter 2020 results.

“On Fenty fashion, we are obviously still in a launching phase and we have to figure out exactly what is the right offer,” he said. “It’s not something that is easy. We were starting entirely from scratch. Obviously, we have the great help from Rihanna on this, but I would say it’s still a work in progress when it comes to really defining what the offer will be.”

Indeed, “the offer” was unclear from the start. At the house’s founding, a statement from LVMH read that the new brand would be “centred on Rihanna, developed by her,” and would take “shape with her vision.”

But while Rihanna built her profile in part on her own strategic and adventurou­s embrace of high fashion — receiving the fashion icon award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America in 2014 in a seethrough crystal-spangled dress, thong and white fur boa — she often seemed better at choosing statement-making looks for herself than creating new ones for her followers. Generally veering between oversize and highly body-con, with a streetwear bent, the clothes seemed more derivative than groundbrea­king.

They may also have been more expensive than many of Rihanna’s fans might have expected (albeit less so than the usual LVMH offering): $940 for a padded denim jacket; $810 for a corseted shirt-dress.

Meanwhile, Savage x Fenty grabbed headlines with song’n-dance-’n-celebrity-filled lingerie extravagan­zas filmed live and then streamed on Amazon Prime Video, positionin­g itself as the empowered, inclusive answer to Victoria’s Secret in a post-#MeToo world.

This timeout the Fenty clothing brand has been granted could allow it to reposition itself and refine its offering, seizing a better moment to return — perhaps after the pent-up party-desires of the pandemic are unleashed. There is a reason they have not closed it entirely.

On Wednesday, as news about the LVMH partnershi­p spread, Savage x Fenty issued a statement outlining details of the new funding round, in which Jay-Z is an investor through his firm Marcy Venture Partners. In the past year, the brand has experience­d “explosive revenue growth of over 200 per cent,” the statement read, and the “heavily oversubscr­ibed” round would fuel investment into customer acquisitio­n and an expansion into retail.

“The brand strikes a unique balance between affordabil­ity, fashion and comfort, stands deeply for inclusivit­y and diversity, and has differenti­ated itself by building an extraordin­ary level of affinity and unmatched customer loyalty,” said Jonathan Owsley, co-managing partner of L Catterton’s growth fund. There was no mention of the Fenty clothing line, nor the suspended experiment with LVMH.

 ?? MARTIN BUREAU AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Rihanna at a promotiona­l event for her Fenty brand in Paris in 2019. Unlike some LVMH brands that have proved resilient during the pandemic, the Fenty clothing line struggled to find its footing.
MARTIN BUREAU AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Rihanna at a promotiona­l event for her Fenty brand in Paris in 2019. Unlike some LVMH brands that have proved resilient during the pandemic, the Fenty clothing line struggled to find its footing.

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