Guo pei

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GUO PEI

China’s fashion empress on creating Chinese couture BY MARIANNA CERINI AND TONGFEI ZHANG

Hailed as the Chinese Coco Chanel, although more akin to Alexander McQueen and John Galliano, Guo Pei is China’s couturiere extraordinaire - the reason bespoke fashion exists in the country. We chat with the designer about her work, ascending career and why she loves ‘harsh women.’

L

ooking

at

Guo

Pei,

one

wouldn’t

guess

that this petite woman with a bob was the fashion powerhouse she is. Diminutive,

pretty

and

still

looking

very

much

like

a

college

student,

the

47-­‐year-­‐old

has

a

gentleness

unmarred

by

circumstance,

and a poised attitude that’s a study in etiquette.

Unexpected

traits

from

someone

so

high up in the industry. High

up

she

certainly

is

though.

Since

launching her business 17 years ago – when luxury brands were a foreign concept in China – the designer has become a trailblazer

in

the

country’s

fashion

realm,

building

her

atelier,

Rose

Studio,

into

an

internationally admired name whose gravity defying creations are so intricately crafted that they caught the attention of Lady Gaga. If one can talk

of

Chinese

haute

couture

today,

it’s

because of her. “I’ve

just

been

sticking

to

my

own

ideas,”

she

says

almost

dismissively,

“and

tried

always to be persistent and passionate about what I do. It’s all about following a routine – that’s the most challenging and interesting part

of

the

job.”

For

her

fashion

house,

that

has

meant

years of honing a level of craftsmanship so meticulous

it

now

equals,

and

in

some

cases

surpasses,

the

technical

feats

of

Paris

couture. Reinterpreting

both

Eastern

and

Western

motifs,

her

couture

collections

are

displays

of sartorial grandeur; risk-taking designs that draw easy comparisons to the aesthetic of Alexander McQueen. Like

the

late

British

designer,

her

works

are created to be worn. But could also easily

sit

in

a

museum:

lavishly

embellished,

they

are

made

of

visionary

garments,

from

weighty,

exaggerated

dresses

and

skirts

moulded into bell shapes to majestic headpieces

that

are

total

fantasy

or,

as

fashion

mogul

Hong

Huang

once

described

them

“Chinese

embroidery

on

steroids.”

One

dress

alone,

made

entirely

of

golden

28

November 2014 / www.thatsmags.com

panels,

took

50,000

hours

to

inish.

“For

that

particular

gown

we

adjusted

the

shape

millions

of

times,

and

worked

on

the

embroidery

over

and

over

again,”

Guo

recalls.

“It’s

a

personal

milestone,

and,

in

a

way,

I

think

it

really

marked

the

emergence

of

haute

couture

here.” Guo

debuted

it

in

2005,

after

a

visit

to the Musée de l’Armée in Paris where she found herself inspired by Napoleon Bonaparte’s regal military uniforms. One hundred artisans worked on it. Today,

her

studio

counts

a

team

of

450

people,

300

of

whom

are

exclusively

specialized

in

traditional

hand

embroidery.

Yearly,

they

generate

3,000

to

4,000

pieces

for

some

500

regular

clients,

including

public

igures

from China’s and the world’s highest political,

media

and

social

circles.

Dresses go from anything between RMB40,000

to

RMB5

million.

Although

Guo

says

margins

are

low,

it’s

an

impressive

volume

for

a

couture

operation,

one

no

doubt

tied to relatively cheap labor. The

road

to

get

here,

Guo

says,

has

been

a long one. The daughter of an army platoon leader who later held a high-ranking position in the

state

housing

authority,

Guo

was

born

in

Beijing

in

1967,

at

the

start

of

the

Cultural

Revolution.

Her

family

remained

in

the

capital,

and

in

1982

she

enrolled

in

fashion

studies at Beijing Second Light Industry School. China lacked any sort of worldly information about

fashion

at

the

time,

but

that

did

not

stop the designer from falling in love with the art of dressmaking. Upon

graduating

in

1986,

she

irst

took

a

job

designing

children’s

clothing

and,

soon

after,

went

on

to

work

for

woman’s

fashion

company

Tianma,

one

of

the

irst

generation

of privately owned businesses in a China where

the

drab,

functional

Mao

uniforms

that had been obligatory wear were starting to

disappear.

She

stayed

on

10

years,

taking

a

pro it

share

in

Tianma

that

allowed

her

to

save enough money to start her own bespoke atelier,

Rose

Studio,

in

1997.

Located

in

Beijing’s

798

Art

District,

an industrial area of former power plants and

factories,

the

studio

a

non-­‐descript

three-­‐story

of ice

building

that

also

acts

as

exhibition hall for some of her dresses – is a far cry from anything you’d imagine when thinking of couture. Yet it’s here that Guo took

the

irst

steps

towards

the

exclusive

art

of

custom-­‐ itted

clothing.

Eight

years

after

starting

her

brand,

she

made her foray into haute couture with a irst

collection

of

38

dresses

(including

the

gold ball gown) showcased in front of China’s key

fashion

media

in

Beijing.

Her

star

soared. Guo has been holding fashion shows every

two

or

three

years

since

surreal,

opulent

spectacles that resemble art performances rather

than

simple

runway

walks,

with

references to Chinese fairytales and the yearnings of

a

woman,

gothic

impressions

and

long-­‐lost

dreams. In

2008,

three

of

her

designs

inspired

by Chinese elements such as jade and pagodas were selected to be worn by the medal presenters,

tray

bearers

and

athlete

escorts

at the Beijing Olympics victory ceremonies. Chinese singer Song Zuying also donned one

her

creations

during

the

closing

night,

a

gown

adorned

in

200,000

Swarovski

diamonds sewn on by hand. In

an

almost

submissive

manner,

however,

Guo

does

not

hold

the

event

as

the

highlight

of

her

career.

“The

gowns

I

produce

for

events

like

the

Olympics,

or

for

some

of

my

clients,

don’t

really

represent

me

as

a

designer,”

she

says.

“I

like

to

think

of

them

as

mere

commodities,

rather

than

genuine

re lections

of

my

own

artistic

inclination.

In

a

way,

I

am

just

a

seamstress,

a

service

person

who

does

what

the

customer

wants.” If such dutiful attitude has proved popular

among

her

wealthy

clientele,

it

has

also

acted

as

a

double-­‐edged

sword.

In

2009,

www.thatsmags.com / November 2014

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