The Borneo Post

Designer Isabel Marant apologises for Mexican appropriat­ion

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MEXICO CITY: French fashion designer Isabel Marant has apologized after the Mexican government criticized her for appropriat­ing and selling clothes based on traditiona­l indigenous patterns.

Marant heads the latest fashion brand to be condemned by the Mexican government for copying indigenous designs, with similar complaints levelled against Spanish retail giants Zara and Mango.

Culture minister Alejandra Frausto Guerrero published an open letter earlier this month demanding an explanatio­n as to why her Paris-based company was selling garments based on motifs with documented origins in Mexico.

One includes a cape that appears to copy a pattern used by the Purepecha community of northweste­rn Michoacan state, which retails on the fashion house's website for 490 euros ($580).

Marant acknowledg­ed to Frausto that Purepecha textiles had influenced her latest collection and said future designs would properly “pay tribute to our sources of inspiratio­n”.

“If the Isabel Marant house and the designer have disrespect­ed the Purepecha community... they implore you, and the country you represent, to accept their most sincere apologies,” said a letter from Marant, dated November 6 but made public on Frausto's Twitter feed late on Monday.

In recent years Mexico has sought to publicly shame multinatio­nal brands that it has accused of ransacking the cultural heritage of poor villagers.

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