The employees of luxury houses, more emphasized by artistic directors
For some time now, artistic directors of luxury houses have tended to put their employees in the spotlight. But how do you explain this emphasis on a staff that used to work in the shadows?
For its 2023 cruise collection, the Italian luxury house Gucci presented its lookbook on July 17th. The particularity of this lookbook is the models that present the collection. Indeed, rather than the house’s usual models, the brand’s employees were chosen to pose. We find for example Marvin, menswear designer, as well as Olivia, kidswear designer and Geraldo, celebrity designer.
The Italian house is not the only one to set up this kind of recognition for its staff in these times of health crisis. The British fashion house Burberry took the plunge and a few weeks later, it presented its spring-summer 2021 pre-collection with a fashion show for its employees. The brand expressed its desire to “represent the diversity of talent within the house”.
This desire for transparency can also be found at Valentino, with artistic director Pierpaolo Piccioli using social networks to highlight the work of his employees. More particularly at Instagram, where Valentino’s DA puts this strategy into practice and regularly salutes its seamstresses Irene, Alessandra, Antonietta and Elide.
This strategy has notably led to a polemic for the house Simon porte Jacquemus, which was accused this summer of not employing racialized people. After posting a photo of its team, the brand attracted the wrath of Internet users, accusing it of superficially highlighting color models, but without hiring racialized people within the house.
The anthropologist and author Giulia Mensitieri explains this phenomenon in her book on the backstage of the fashion industry, The Most Beautiful Job in the World, by “fetishizing the backstage and work, giving consumers the illusion of being able to see what, theoretically, they can’t see. This is an effect that Instagram is multiplying, because fashion workers – especially models – are explicitly asked to make public a kind of staging of their private lives. …] These representations do not take into account the complexity of relationships within a house, and the fact that it is an industry based on strong asymmetries. The current crisis hasn’t helped things to improve: we’ve thrown a lot of people out of the company, and that’s only going to make competition between brands stronger, and therefore the deterioration of working conditions“.
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Featured photo : © Gucci
[EN] CLAIRE DOMERGUE, A SPECIALIST IN COMMUNICATION IN THE LUXURY SECTOR, HAS SURROUNDED HERSELF WITH EXPERTS TO CREATE THE FIRST MEDIA DEDICATED TO THE ECONOMIC NEWS OF LUXURY AND FASHION. THE LATTER DRAWS THE ATTENTION OF ITS READERS TO ALL THE MAJOR PLAYERS IN THESE SECTORS WHO SHARE THEIR EXPERIENCES, VISIONS AND KNOW-HOW. MORE THAN A SPECIALIZED WEBZINE, LUXUS PLUS IS A MULTI-SECTOR INFORMATION SYSTEM, WHICH HAS BECOME THE REFERENCE MONITORING TOOL FOR LUXURY AND FASHION PROFESSIONALS. OUR NEWSLETTERS CONTRIBUTE TO MAKE OUR READERS AWARE OF THE CHANGES AFFECTING THE LUXURY INDUSTRIES. THANKS TO AN INCREASED WATCH AND AN EXCELLENT KNOWLEDGE OF THE SECTOR, WE ARE INTERESTED IN THE MAIN ECONOMIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL STAKES OF FASHION, FINE WATCHMAKING, JEWELRY, GASTRONOMY, COSMETICS, PERFUMES, HOTELS, PRESTIGIOUS REAL ESTATE...********[FR] Claire Domergue, spécialiste de la communication dans le secteur du luxe, s’est entourée d’experts pour créer le premier média consacré à l’actualité économique du Luxe et de la mode. Ce dernier attire tout particulièrement l’attention de ses lecteurs sur l’ensemble des acteurs majeurs de ces secteurs qui y partagent leurs expériences, visions et savoir-faire. Plus qu’un webzine spécialisé, Luxus Plus est un système d’information multi-sectoriel, devenu l’outil de veille de référence pour les professionnels du luxe et de la mode. Nos newsletters de veille contribuent en effet à sensibiliser nos lecteurs aux mutations qui touchent les industries du luxe. Grâce à une veille accrue et à une excellente connaissance du secteur, nous nous intéressons aux principaux enjeux économiques et technologiques de la mode, la haute horlogerie, la joaillerie, la gastronomie, des cosmétiques, parfums, de l’hôtellerie, l’immobilier de prestige…