Bangkok Post

Chanel’s creati❖e director Virginie Viard to lea❖e brand

- MIMOSA SPENCER

Chanel artistic director Virginie Viard is leaving the label, the luxury brand said last week, kicking off speculatio­n over who will replace her in one of the fashion industry’s most coveted positions.

“A new chapter is opening for Chanel Mode,” Chanel said in a statement, confirming the change, which was first reported on fashion news website Business of Fashion.

The privately-owned label, known for tweed jackets, quilted handbags with double-C logos and the No.5 perfume, did not name a successor as it thanked Viard for her “rich collaborat­ion of five years”.

Viard, 62, worked at Chanel for nearly 30 years alongside Karl Lagerfeld, whose role she took over in 2019 following his death.

She favoured relaxed silhouette­s with an 80s flare and took a low-key approach compared to her predecesso­r, sending models along the Seine River and down a street in Manchester for recent fashion shows, for example, marking a contrast with the showmanshi­p of Lagerfeld, who built towering sets including a rocketship and indoor waterfall for his catwalk presentati­ons.

Her departure comes as the industry adjusts to slower growth and several other labels, including Kering-owned Gucci, Valentino and Burberry, seek new creative direction to reignite sales.

The post-Covid pandemic boom, fuelled by pent-up demand for fashion, has tapered off as shoppers spend less due to the rising cost of living.

Chanel teams will ensure the “continuity” of collection­s in the interim period, and the brand will host its autumn-winter haute couture show 2024/25 on June 25 in Paris, it said.

Rumours of a new designer at Chanel have swirled for years, most recently including talk of industry heavyweigh­ts like former Gucci designer Alessandro Michele, who has since been recruited to Valentino.

Chanel chief executive Leena Nair last month brushed off talk of a designer change, noting that Viard had overseen strong growth in ready-to-wear fashion sales, which have surged two-and-a-half-times since 2018.

Sales at Chanel were up 16% last year to nearly US$20 billion (727 billion baht), a slower rate than smaller rival Hermès, which grew sales 21% to €13.4 billion, but faster than LVMH’s fashion and leather goods division, which was up 14% to €42 billion.

The world’s second-largest label after LVMH’s Louis Vuitton, Chanel is owned by French billionair­e brothers Alain and Gerard Wertheimer.

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