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R.I.P. Pierre Cardin – Gone But Never Forgotten: A Major Style Influence For His Space-Age, Avant-Garde Worn By Jackie Kennedy, Brigitte Bardot, To Lady Gaga!

R.I.P. Pierre Cardin – Gone But Never Forgotten: A Major Style Influence For
His Space-Age, Avant-Garde Worn By Jackie Kennedy, Brigitte Bardot, To Lady
Gaga!   

Pierre Cardin, the Italian-born French designer of an eternal tomorrow
who defined the futuristic look of the 1960s and revolutionized the
business of high fashion, died today. He was 98.

Cardin died Tuesday at the American Hospital in Neuilly-sur-Seine, just
outside Paris, his family told the Agence France-Presse.

During his seven-decade career, Cardin came to be known for his avant-garde
creativity in both fashion and business, and his futuristic materials and
stark silhouettes with geometric details became synonymous with the Space Age.
A Cardin garment is unmistakable with its trademark minimalism and almost
complete disregard for the female form; it is the antithesis of the womanly
“New Look” pioneered by Christian Dior, with whom Cardin worked before
founding his eponymous couture fashion house in 1950.

In describing his philosophy, Cardin often said, “My favorite garment is the
one I invent for a life that does not yet exist, the world of tomorrow.” His
designs, worn by the likes of The Beatles and Lauren Bacall, established a
mod-chic aesthetic long before 2001: A Space Odyssey hit theaters in 1968. He was fascinated with the idea of space travel,
often incorporating goggles and helmets into his looks, and he was the first
civilian to try on Buzz Aldrin’s original space suit before designing his own
version for NASA in 1970.

Pierre Cardin '60 Ans De Creation'-Getty-Embed-2019

Jun Sato/WireImage

Pierre Cardin’s ’60 ans de Creation’ at Bunka Fashion College in 2010 in
Tokyo.

Cardin carried this sense of adventurousness into the business realm as well;
his rejection of fashion’s traditional strategies ushered in a new era of
accessibility in luxury design. He was the first major French couturier to
sell ready-to-wear clothing in a department store and the first of his peers
to grow his fashion house into an international empire of licensed products.
And he was the first Parisian couture designer to create men’s clothing.

Today, he may be more known for his licensing deals than his fashion. There
are more than 900 licensed Pierre Cardin products available in 140 countries,
from cars, perfumes and sunglasses to bottled water, wine and pens. His
business model ruffled feathers in the fashion community yet was widely
imitated.

“Cardin created a brand — before that word was used as a business definition —
and went on to break every code and development plan you would find in a
manual about smart fashion management,” fashion critic Suzy Menkes wrote
in Brazilian Vogue in 2014.

Pietro Cardini was born in northeastern Italy on July 2, 1922, and he spent
his early years in San Biagio di Callalta, a small city near Treviso. His
parents, both French, relocated the family to their homeland in 1924 to escape
the threat of fascism. Cardin went to school in central France and showed an
early interest in dressmaking even though his father, a wine merchant, wanted
him to study architecture.

At 14, Cardin started work as a clothier’s apprentice and at 17 left home to
work for a tailor in Vichy. He served in the Red Cross in World War II, but
after the war, he longed for a return to fashion.

“I didn’t feel like continuing to be a Red Cross worker,” Cardin said in a
1998 interview with the Italian newspaper La Stampa. “A fortune teller — a 65-year-old woman in Vichy — read my cards and told
me that I would be successful, exceptionally successful, and that my name
would be known as far away as Australia. I thought she was crazy because, at
that time, I didn’t have anything.”

In 1945, Cardin moved to Paris to continue his design career and found work in
the Paquin fashion house, where he helped design dresses for director Jean
Cocteau’s Beauty and the Beast (1946)He briefly worked for famed fashion designer Elsa Schiaparelli before
joining Christian Dior’s newly opened eponymous couture house in 1947.

Cardin assisted with the creation of Dior’s revolutionary feminine,
full-skirted New Look, often credited with revitalizing haute couture in
France. Some members of the fashion press saw him as the Frenchman’s natural
successor, but he left the House of Dior and launched his own brand in 1950.

His solo career took off in 1951, when he created about 30 of the costumes for
a masquerade ball hosted in Venice by Spanish art collector Carlos de
Beistegui. In 1998, Vanity Fair referred to the event at the Palazzo Labia as “one of the — if not the
— most famous balls of the 20th century,” and it is still frequently referred
to as the party of the century. Cardin began designing for men and presented
his first women’s couture collection in 1953, soon becoming a member of the
official association of French haute couture designers, the Chambre Syndicale.

He debuted what would come to be one of his most recognizable designs, the
bubble dress, in 1954. The dress, with a fitted bodice and loose skirt that
abruptly gathers at the hem, produces a “bubble” effect. The silhouette
offered a novel twist on the full skirts that dominated evening wear at the
time and remains popular today. Cardin also became known for his incorporation
of unusual materials such as plastics, vinyl, industrial zippers, belt buckles
and hammered metals in his designs.

A few years after he was allowed into the haute couture establishment, Cardin
started to rebel against it, acknowledging the decline of haute couture and
the potential value of pre-measured, pret-a-porter garments. After opening
men’s and women’s boutiques (dubbed Adam and Eve in 1954 and 1957,
respectively), he took over a corner of the Parisian department store
Printemps for his Pierre Cardin collection in 1957 and was expelled from the
Chambre Syndicale soon after.

“I am a reactionary. I always try to do the opposite of reality,” Cardin
told The New York Times in 2002. “When I did the ‘P.C.’ logo, it was a scandal! I had a big
‘P.C.’ on my chest, and people said, ‘How dare you put your initials on a
garment!’ And now it’s Chanel on the shoe, on the bag! We’re labeled to
death!”

Despite losing the blessing of the Chambre Syndicale (later reinstated),
Cardin’s star only rose. He presented women’s and men’s ready-to-wear
collections and developed a stable of Hollywood clients. He told The New York Times: “Women came to Pierre Cardin for youth. I had Eva Perón, María Félix and
Rita Hayworth as clients — the three grand dames of my time.” Cardin also
dressed Bacall, who wore his fuchsia mini-dress with molded pyramid shapes in
her 1968 CBS special Bacall and the Boys, and he created the collarless suits that The Beatles wore in the cover art
for their 1963 single “I Want to Hold Your Hand.” Gregory Peck, Rex Harrison
and Mick Jagger also were clients.

Naomi Campbell attends The Commonwealth Fashion Exchange Reception -Getty-Embed-2019

Peter Nicholls – Pool/Getty Images

Naomi Campbell wore vintage Cardin at The Commonwealth Fashion Exchange
Reception in 2018.

It was during this period that Cardin began to take on projects that were not
strictly in the fashion realm — he indulged his obsession with space travel by
designing his own version of NASA’s original space suit and was contracted to
redesign the uniforms for Pakistan International Airlines, as well as the
national costume of the Philippines (the Barong Tagalog), gaining
international acclaim. He also was one of the five French couturiers who
participated in the 1973 “Battle of Versailles,” which pitted the French
fashion establishment against a new wave of American designers.

Though some saw his label’s ubiquity as a cautionary tale of an overstretched
brand, Cardin remained confident in his business practices.

“I’ve done it all! I even have my own water! I’ll do perfumes, sardines. Why
not?” Cardin told The New York Times. “During the war, I would have rather smelled the scent of sardines than of
perfume. If someone asked me to do toilet paper, I’d do it.”

Pierre Cardin attends the Dior Croisiere 2016 -Getty-Embed-2019

Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images for Dior

Pierre Cardin at the Dior Croisiere 2016 at Palais Bulle in 2015 in
Theoule sur Mer, France.

Cardin continued to release regular collections through the 1980s and ’90s as
he built his business empire (buying and expanding Maxim’s restaurant and
hotel franchise) and moved into the Palais Bulles (Bubble House) near Cannes.
Meanwhile, he was named a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador in 1991 after starting a
variety of humanitarian projects for the victims of the Chernobyl nuclear
disaster.

He attempted to sell his company in 2011, asking for more than $1.1
billion. The Wall Street Journal estimated the value at closer to $223 million, and Cardin did not find
a buyer.

He had no known survivors.

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