Coco Chanel Information and Images
Transcription
Coco Chanel Information and Images
Turnbull High School Art and Design Department Higher and Int 2 Design Studies Coco Chanel Turnbull High School Art and Design Department Coco Chanel (1883 - 1971) Gabrielle ‘Coco’ Chanel was born in Saumur, France and raised first in an orphanage and then a convent. In Paris she worked as a milliner who began to make dresses before ascending gradually to high society by socializing with aristocrats and political figures. Chanel can lay claim to having invented the look of the 20th century. At the height of the Belle Époque she stripped women of their corsets and feathers, bobbed their hair, put them in bathing suits and sent them out to get tanned in the sun. She introduced the little black dress, trousers for women, costume jewellery and the suit that became her trademark. She knew and collaborated with Picasso, Diaghilev, Stravinsky, Cocteau, Jean Renoir and Visconti; matching their innovations by liberating women from the prison of 19th century fashion and creating a whole new concept of elegance. A modernist in the true sense of the word Chanel gave primacy to function and materials. She promoted apparent simplicity in dress and adopted fabrics and items more usually associated with the clothing choices of the working class (this was linked to her upbringing as a descendant of peasant rural stock). She tended to work against convention and prioritize the comfort and self worth of the wearer through the use of a pared down glamour. Her skill was in constructing wearable, basic, yet elegant garments and merchandizing them as elements of a definable lifestyle Chanel’s designs of the1920s are characterized by a straight, linear silhouette. She experimented with textile and construction techniques more usually associated with sporting and holiday garments. Groundbreaking designs include jersey dresses with cardigan coats, an early example of the sportswear principle of separates dressing. Her daring use of jersey fabric (at the time more commonly applied to men’s undergarments and swimwear) allowed for greater comfort, one of the hallmarks of the Chanel style. From menswear she also borrowed the use of the colour black with contrasing white collar and cuffs, a reference to dandy fashions. She drew inspiration from military uniforms and combined details from tailoring and dressmaking. Chanel used serviceable materials and relaxed patterns in the design of fashionable daywear for her market; sophisticated urban women. The little black dress was launched in 1926 – variations were available with dramatic geometric chevrons and contrasting dull and shiny textures emphasizing the flattering nature and expensive simplicity of the cut. The beauty of this simplification in construction and decoration was that such designs could theoretically be more usefully translated for the mass market. Though Chanel never endorsed illegal copying of her collections she was aware of the positive democratic connotations some of her styles carried. Turnbull High School Art and Design Department In the 1930s Chanel’s dresses appear more feminine and romantic. However even in these she asserted her modernism by revealing their construction – exposing the seams and other “mechanics” of the garment. By this period her name had become associated with a wholesale modernization of women’s clothing reminiscent of Henry Ford’s impact on the automobile industry. Chanel was suspected of associations with Nazism and spent several years in obscurity. In 1954 she returned to couture and captured the American market with her boucle suits and trademark handbags. When she died in 1971 her successors in the company inherited a global high fashion business with a profitable sideline in perfume, jewellery and accessories and potential for expansion into ready to wear – all achieved through Coco Chanel’s personal drive, creative vision and determination to triumph over adversity. 1916 – part of Chanel’s first complete couture collection. Pockets were beginning to appear on women’s garments. The war made extravagance impossible and Chanel provided women with versatile clothing in practical colours 1922 – beaded and embroidered silk evening gown. Shape is typical of the early 1920s, flaring from the hips to an uneven hemline. There is a black silk chemise with machine lace edged hem 1930 – multi-coloured wool jersey suit. The long woven jersey jacket with scarf collar has no buttons or fastenings. The cuffs and two large patch pockets are lined with yellow jersey. The yoked skirt is pleated from the hips. Beneath the jacket the bodice of yellow jersey is made like a man’s waistcoat with four pockets and button fastenings 1937 – evening dress and cape. Much of Chanel’s evening wear in the 1930s was in this dramatic colour combination. The full length dress is covered in black sequins applied like fish scales with scarlet silk satin panels and sashes. The matching semi circular cape may be caught at the neck with a hook fastening