Partager l'article ! New book on Anna Sui's career which took off in 1990 thanks to Madonna: Nouveau livre sur la carrière d'Anna Sui qui a décollé en 1990 grâce ...
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Nouveau livre sur la carrière d'Anna Sui qui a décollé en 1990 grâce à Madonna.
New book highlights Sui's career of cool catwalks
JANUARY 6, 2011, 4:20 P.M. ET.
Associated Press
NEW YORK — Each runway show is a chapter in Anna Sui's life. It's a commentary on her interests, passions and mindset of the moment.
Now each runway show is also a chapter in a new book, which, she says, is an autobiography in pictures.
Seeing it all together, Sui notices some commonalities — especially the influence of rock 'n' roll — and some aberrations — like the joint surfer-hip hop moment — but it all
makes her feel both humbled and proud.
"All I ever wanted to do was design clothes for rock stars and people who go to rock concerts. That I've been able to do that for so long is
pretty amazing," says Sui.
It's also pretty amazing that Sui can define the single moment her career took off in 1990: Madonna, on her way to a Jean Paul Gaultier fashion show in
Paris, wore one of Sui's dresses.
She could have chosen any one of the hundreds of designer frocks littering her hotel room, but the pop star-fashion diva picked hers.
"It was the first in a chain of events that gave me the confidence to stage my own fashion show," Sui writes in the
forward of the book, published by Chronicle.
And she's been staging fun, lively shows ever since with Naomi Campbell wearing a feathered headdress, Carla Bruni in knee-highs, Linda
Evangelista in a polar-bear cap and Helena Christensen in a tinsel-like scarf. More recently, Agness Deyn rocked a guitar and Isabeli
Fontana piled on turquoise bangles.
Any show, any year, you'll see models smiling in the photographs, a rare catwalk combination.
Sui has carved out a niche in romantic, bohemian dresses that double for daytime and cocktails, as long as the wearer is young and hip. But she also broadened her appeal with a
Target collaboration, fragrances and cosmetics.
"What people look to me for is a whole look," she says. "People come to me for
icing on the cake, not a basic stretch pant."
Sui was there with Madonna when she wore a sheer black babydoll at the Gaultier show, linked by mutual friend and top photographer Steven
Meisel. "She came out with a coat on, and I couldn't wait to see what she was wearing. I thought it would be some outrageous
outfit, and then she said, 'Anna, I have a surprise for you.'"
Madonna also wore Sui when she was photographed by Meisel in 1992 for Vogue.
Meisel, along with other high-wattage friends, including Campbell, Evangelista, Christy Turlington, Sofia Coppola, and Jack White and his wife
Karen Elson, certainly help keep Sui part of the cool crowd, which seems a bit at odds with the shy, cherub-faced woman who opens up her Garment
Center office with her own keys for an early morning interview and spends her downtime in a Detroit suburb with her parents.
She also doesn't wear her glasses when she takes her bow at the end of the fashion show so the faces in the crowd will be blurred because it's too nerve-racking. "I think to myself, 'Oh my god, how can I follow these most beautiful girls in the world out there?'"
Her collections wouldn't be what they are if Sui didn't have this yin-yang personality, a full life and such loyalty to herself and her group of diverse friends, says
Andrew Bolton, curator at The Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He counts himself in Sui's inner circle, and
it's mostly his words in "Anna Sui."
"In her world, personal and professional always overlap," Bolton says.
They met in the mid-90s at the Council of Fashion Designers of America awards when they were both seated at Vivienne Tam's table. "We became quick friends. We'd take weekend trips and talk a lot about music. We're both such huge music fans and fans of street style,"
Bolton says. "Our friendship didn't develop over high culture."
Yet, Sui can't fully hide her intellectual side. "She's so well read, and she's so eager to learn,"
Bolton says.
When you look at her designs, you'll see references to fine artists, American explorers, Victoriana and classic fashion designers, both in European
couture and American sportswear. Bolton picks out Arnold Scaasi, Halston, Geoffrey Beene, Yves Saint Laurent and Chanel as particular
influences.
But then there's the bits of "Beach Blanket" movies, "Hansel & Gretel" and punk star Siouxsie Sioux, too.
Her current concert calendar includes Gorillaz and Phoenix, so maybe there'll be hits of hip-hop and electronica in the new fall collection that will debut next
month at New York Fashion Week.
Work starts on the next batch of clothes even before the previous ones have digested with retailers and the press, Sui explains. Believe it or not, her collections often start
with the shoe that will be worn on the runway because getting shoes made takes longer than garment samples.
Maybe that's because for clothes, it's one-stop shopping at her Garment District studio, which houses a frilly, luxe showroom, Sui's office full of fabrics and
photos, and a small, old-school-yet-buzzing manufacturing space, filled with sewing machines, patterns, and racks and racks of clothes.
She's a passionate supporter of the midtown neighborhood that was the heart of fashion when she first came to Parsons the New School of Design in the '70s, when
she first met Meisel. She has seen local resources dwindle and full globalization of an industry that she worries can seem impersonal. Impersonal just isn't her way.
"I have to see everything I make, touch it, feel it. I love the draping of the fabric, the muslin, to see how a sleeve flutters,"
she says.
"This is my life, this is all an extension of my life."
Source: WSJ (Wall Street Journal).
"Anna Sui"
Andrew Bolton (Author)
Jack White (Preface)
Steven Meisel (Introduction)
Anna Sui (Foreword)
Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: Chronicle Books (November 2, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0811868109
ISBN-13: 978-0811868105
Product Dimensions: 11.2 x 9.3 x 1.1 inches
Anna Sui's trendsetting rock-and-roll looks have made her one of this decade's top five fashion icons (Time). Here, in the first book to cover the entire scope of Sui's twenty-year career, fans get rare access to the designer's creative process. This richly visual retrospective celebrates her influence, from her first show that snared the support of supermodels Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Christy Turlington, and Kate Moss to the role she's played in making the babydoll dress one of fashion's most iconic silhouettes. With more than 400 photographs from legendary photographers, this exquisite tome with a shimmering foil-stamped cover is essential for all fashionistas.
Andrew Bolton is curator of the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. During his tenure at the museum he has curated over ten exhibitions including Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy and AngloMania: Tradition and Transgression in British Fashion. He is the author of more than eight books including monographs on the designers Paul Poiret and Gabrielle Chanel. Bolton lives in New York City.
Jack White is a musician, producer, and co-founder of the White Stripes. He also founded The Raconteurs and The Dead Weather.
Anna Sui won the Council of Fashion Designers of America Lifetime Achievement Award in 2009. Her clothes, cosmetics, and accessories are sold in more than forty countries and her runway shows awe and inspire. Sui lives and works in New York City.
Steven Meisel is one of the top fashion photographers of all time.
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