top of page

Talent Incubator Powered by 1664

Updated: Nov 20, 2023

To continue its goal of realizing the potential of young creatives through its incubator program, LIGNES DE FUITE has initiated the interview series Words of Advice which brings together its protégés with industry leaders to discuss how they can succeed in their respective fields. In this edition, Anna-Maria Varriano, a Brand Management Expert, shares her impressive career path in great detail with aspiring designer Giovanni Caci.

Gio Caci: Can you please describe your background and how you got into fashion?

Anna-Maria Varriano: I actually wanted to be an art historian. I wanted to study art. Coming from a strict Italian background, my dad refused because I had to get married and have children. So, I went to LaSalle College in fashion merchandising. I worked my way through it working at The Hudson Bay for Levi’s, then from there I went to Dawson College and did a 3-year intensive program in graphic arts. I’ve always loved fashion. I had an opportunity to go to Europe. I was scouted by an Italian agent to model. So I went to Milan. I had just finished school. I actually hated modeling because I’m very very shy. The second day I was there, I wanted to come back home to Montreal, but I met my fiancé at the time, so I ended up staying. I went to a casting for a fit and showroom model for Alexander McQueen, and they hired me on the spot. So I was his fit model and showroom model for about two seasons. And that’s where I met my bosses, Elsa and Luca, who would grab upcoming talent, find them in production and distribute them worldwide. When Alexander McQueen was poached by a Japanese conglomerate, the company I worked for took on Olivier Theyskens, and that’s when I started selling in the showroom. So I was traveling with them and I was also traveling a lot with my fiancé because he was a pro athlete. I was always on a plane, train, automobile—you name it. And after Olivier Theyskens, they picked up Rick Owens, and that’s where my life started to boom.


How was it working with Rick Owens in the beginning?

Basically, it was my two bosses, Rick and his wife, Michele. They were introduced to him by Tommy Perse at Maxfield. That was for financing Rick (he’s from Los Angeles). He was producing everything in his house, in his washing machines: jersey, live cut, and everything. So, they wanted to bring him on board. It was a very difficult couple of seasons. It was my two bosses, myself, and the model Terry Anne. Italian production didn’t understand what the hell this guy was doing, so it was very very hard. “How do I wash a leather jacket?” “How do I live-cut jersey?” “We don’t understand the folding,” and all that. It was a big challenge, and from there a lot of hard work, a lot of pushing to find the right production, then they slowly started to climb and—that was it! Then it hit a boom and it was crazy.


How long have you been with Rick Owens?

The entire time. We were also at 9/11 together. We were very close to the attacks.


Oh my goodness! So you saw the whole thing?

Yeah, and we didn’t know what was happening because we were in the showroom. So it was very interesting. The protection that the bosses gave us—it was just the model, myself, Rick, Michele—the way they took care of us during that time was pretty crazy. They’re my family, ‘till today.


And do you still keep a close relationship with them?

Absolutely. My closest friend is still there. My other best friend recently left 2 years ago. He started his own collection which is doing really really well. I’ve been helping him a lot. At the same time, during all this experience that I was accumulating at Rick Owens, I was engaged to be married, but I was never home. He was never home. Our base was Milan, but he went to play in Greece, and then played in Tuscany. We were always traveling and then meeting up, so I was on the road a lot. At one point—I always remember this: a group of 3 beautiful girls walk into the Rick Owens showroom (because you can’t walk in without an appointment), and my boss Luca says, in Italian, “check out these chicks, they want to open a high-end luxury Barney’s online.” We didn’t know anything about online at that point. But at that time, I had already opened up a shoe store in Montreal. Every time I came home for the summer, people would ask, “where did you get your Ann [Demeulemeester] boots?” “Where did you get your Rick Shoes?” “Where did you get that?” “Where did you get the COMME des GARÇONS?” I would buy it in Europe. So I started researching it and, with Les Createurs—I don’t know if you remember her, you might be too

young. She carried all the Japanese and avant-garde designers on Sherbrooke. So I got her to come see Rick Owens, and she bought the collections. So, the first time Rick Owens was represented in Canada was from her. Of course, the complaints from customers: “there’s no shoes!” So I helped her research a little bit about the shoes and then she said to me, “Listen, it’s too much work, too many sizes. I have a financier for you, open up a shoe store.” That’s what we did: we opened up Mona Moore right below her.


Mona Moore was active in the early 2000s?

York Times, LA Times, Th e Gazette. We had so many celebrities shop withe carried all the top: Alaia, Balenciaga, Lanvin, Marc Jacobs, Ann Demeulemeester, Dries van Noten. We did only runway styles. We were hidden, we were a destination, we were right below her. Les Createurs gave us a huge helping hand by bringing customers to us. The first couple of seasons we became known and grew a very loyal client base. We were featured in the New York Times, LA Times, The Gazette. We had so many celebrities shop with us. In the beginning, some clients were hesitant, like, “why should I buy from you when I can go to Barney’s in New York or at Jeffrey’s?” But it grew into a monster. When I met the NET-A-PORTER girls, I listened to them. They’re onto something because Montreal is small. But to grow the business you always

need to buy more. And so we started the online business. We hired a young web designer—this is even before SSENSE—and a photographer, and we started putting our stuff online. The business just exploded. I was doing that full-time and working at Rick Owens full time, while being engaged, preparing

for a wedding in Italy.


That must’ve been really hectic!

Yeah, I love that! I never had time to stop and think. We opened a store in LA. My business partners were based there. But I was always with Rick. Like, I did every selling campaign, pre-collection—everything! Sometimes there would be an issue with distribution, so my boss would call me and say “go check this out.” I was doing everything.


How close were you with him throughout the whole process?

He was very private. He would come down to greet Tommy and Sarah (the head buyer) from Maxfield or Alan Bilzerian, but that’s it. He would never stop to talk with buyers. That’s our job. As a designer, you’re a bit more quiet. And Michele is just amazing. She’s his muse. She’d go around organizing the parties and getting the VIP in. And yeah—Rick’s a great guy.


I admire his work. That’s also why I was excited to interview you, so I can understand how he grew his business. Was there any reason why you left?

Well, I was being pressured into getting married. After 9/11, there was a lot of pressure on me from my in-laws and my fiancé, but I was a little bit off-kilter after what I just saw in New York. We were stuck there for 2 weeks. So, it was a little bit daunting. When I returned to Europe they were really pressuring me. I came home a bit early and had the opportunity to open Mona Moore. Then, after 8 years at La Maison Rick Owens, when our stores were working perfectly well, my business partners decided to get greedy on a certain aspect because I was a majority shareholder and sole-signing partner of Mona Moore Montreal,

MonaMoore.Com, and Mona Moore LA. So they decided to close Montreal and move to LA because they wanted the dotcom to be in the US. We fought litigation after litigation, then I just said, “buy me out, I’m good.” My bosses really helped me. Luca and Elsa were really behind me. Then it happened in January, right before Men’s week, I said, “I can’t come to Paris, I just need a moment,” because of what was happening. They said, “you come to Paris. You won’t have to work with clients, we’ll take care of you.” And that’s when they proposed that I become the Senior position of Rick Owens Corp, which meant I had to live in Paris, La Maison Rick Owens... Move to Paris and take on the position of Worldwide Commercial Director of Menswear. It took me a while to decide because I just came home. So I was like, “I owe it to them, they’ve been my family, so I’ll do it.” I loved my job, I loved everything about it. I loved the growth, I loved the travelling, but I didn’t like living in Paris. I was having a really hard time. The Rick Owens head office is in Torino, Italy, and La Maison Rick Owens is in Paris. I found it very difficult. For me, personally, as soon as everybody leaves, you’re in Paris alone. So it was very very difficult.


So you had to constantly be in Paris?

And also traveling all the time. My boss Luca knew that I was having a hard time living in Paris, so he would call and go, “ok you’re coming to Torino tomorrow for 3 days, we have a meeting,” or “get ready we’re going to Asia tomorrow.” So he had me on the road with him all the time. But that lingering of being in Paris was really difficult for me. So at one point my best friend, who was the wholesale director for womenswear, got pregnant so she was working from home, and the Italian commercial director (my best friend), was working from home in Caserta. So I asked Luca, out of the kindness of their heart, if I could work from home and still be on the road like I always was. (I never had an issue with that.) Because the company had grown so much and a lot of new people had come on board, they said to me “if I let you work from home then this person’s gonna wanna work from home, and that person’s gonna want to work from home. We can’t allow that. I need you in Paris, I need you at La Maison Rick Owens.” I came home for the summer and spent time with my family, and I just thought,“I don’t want to go back to Paris.” So, when I had to go back, I met them in Torino and I said, “I can’t live in Paris,” so they offered me to move to Torino. I said, “no, I just did that. I would love to continue working, but I just need to work from home.” They couldn’t accommodate me, which was perfectly understandable, so I still freelanced with them 4 to 6 times a year, then wrote beautiful emails to all the buyers explaining that I had to come home for a family emergency. But I still freelanced with them. After that, I was approached by Alexandre Plokhov.


Who’s Alexandre Plokhov?

Ah, you don’t know who Alexandre Plokhov is?


For the readers who don’t know (haha).

When we were doing a showroom in New York, my best friend—it was her first time leaving Italy and seeing New York—was always saying, “when I finish work, I wanna go have a New York hot-dog.” And we’d walk around New York. She was so fascinated. So Rick comes up to us: “girls, go see this show. I was invited but I can’t go. You have to see this show.” And it was written CLOAK. We looked at the invitations and—we’ve seen a lot of shows, so I’m like, “what do you want to do, go eat a hot-dog or go see this show?” She’s like, “let’s go eat a hot-dog.” CLOAK was a very famous collection that Rick admired at the time. It was the designer Alexandre Plokhov and Robert Geller. They then split up. But then Plokhov continued under his own label. They were also very important during that period. One of my friends who was flying to Paris was sitting next to Plokhov, and Plokhov says, “I need a commercial director.” So we met in New York and I decided to take this new opportunity to work with him. It was amazing. He’s Russian; he’s very different from Rick. We’re still really good friends ‘till this day. It was an amazing opportunity. But for personal reasons I needed to resign with him.


How long were you with Plokhov?

2 years; 4 seasons.


That’s interesting. And how long did you work as Worldwide Commercial Director of Menswear for Rick Owens in Paris?

Full-time, based in Paris for 2 years.





At that point you just really needed to come back to Montreal?

I just needed to come home. I had a friend that I met in the showroom (he was one of Michele’s friends), he helped me a lot because he brought me to see all of Paris. It’s not only about fashion, he would bring me to different areas of Paris. No matter what he did and where we went, I was always depressed. It’s just overwhelming, you know? I loved getting up in the morning to go to work. When work was finished I despised going back to my Parisian apartment. I mean you get invited to these parties and that part of town and it was just like, “oh, everybody’s gonna ask me questions and ask for a job,” and—yeah. So I’m more of a private girl; I’m more of a discreet girl; I know who my friends are. Now the company has completely exploded. We kept in touch, but out of respect for Rick, I never went back to one of his fashion shows. I took a break; a good hiatus from Europe and I was working to launch another project in Montreal. I was studying it with a client of mine and then COVID hit, so I needed to go back to basics. I went to work in a vintage handbag company. That was very different for me, but it’s a huge business, and I’ve learned a lot. I can’t even explain how big it is. Like, slightly used Louis Vuitton, Hermes, Chanel, Prada, Yves Saint Laurent—it’s so huge!


And did that ever take off, or did COVID just completely—

I saw what COVID did to my friends, to small restaurants and boutiques, and to the boutiques in the US. The price hikes, where fashion was going—nobody understood what the hell was going on. I just was like, “let me study this good.” I was the district manager for all the boutiques in Canada. I would train the staff, hire the staff, train product knowledge, report to the boss, and work with the buyers. But each store had specific needs in inventory. It was a nice challenge. I loved it. We used to purchase bags from clients, so we knew how to authenticate them and everything. Then we would let the buyers at HQ make the quotes and resale value.


It sounds like it was a great experience. How did it turn out?

The only sad thing about this is a huge Canadian company called LXR. They’re huge, they own the market of vintage luxury and wholesale here in Canada— without the clothing, but Canadian-based. The thing is that they only work in concession with The Hudson Bay, which is a pretty depressing place. That was the only downfall I had with them. Apart from that, I just loved everything else about doing it. It was very challenging. I love new challenges.


Are there any projects or challenges that you’re currently engaged in?

Well, I always had a project that’s been put aside, I don’t think it’s the time right now. I think fashion’s too crazy, too expensive. Right now it’s just really insane. There’s too much going on. I’m a pro at this, so when I look around I’m like, “this is not a good moment, this is really not a good moment.” The quality of high-end is not the same since Covid. I don’t care what anybody says or what label they put on it, you can tell. I’m an expert when it comes to quality, I’m an expert when it comes to touching: I can tell you if it’s cashmere, if it’s mixed. With Rick I also did the visual merchandising of their self-standing stores and I worked a lot with Rick himself on the shoes. I know quality and I just find it’s not there right now. But it’s still logo-mania and streetwear; everyone is copying everyone. Buyers are playing it safe and continue to buy the collections that they know will sell. As before it was fun to introduce new brands and buyers would give new designers a chance.


Is this happening across the board?

Across the board. It’s not what it used to be.


So would it be more difficult for someone like me who wants to build a brand to get started because of this?

Well it’s really cut-throat right now because streetwear is still dominating; it’s a sneaker culture. Rick came out at the right time.


Do you mean when he started, or exploded?

Exploded. I mean when he came out, there were 3 stores in the world that carried him, and he was doing everything from his LA loft. Right now is difficult; buyers are tired, prices are high so the spending has gone down, so they have to be very careful with their buys. Department stores are having the hardest time.


I would like to know, since I just recently graduated from Lasalle—

In design?


Yeah, in fashion design.

Congratulations!


Thanks! So my goal is to eventually build a design brand of my own. Based on the information you’ve given about the difficulties in the industry, where should I begin?

My only advice to you: if you want to grow in the fashion business, go take an internship in a fashion company in Europe. Internship, part-time—just go to Europe. There’s nothing here.


You mean nothing in North America, Montreal, or—

The experience you’ll acquire abroad, the professionalism they teach you, and the ethics they teach you are not the same as here. It’s really about paying attention to details, listening, and watching. Nobody here in Canada will teach you that anywhere. Being a team, listening, and really watching and learning different

methods. Lasalle College is gonna teach you as much as they know, they taught me as much as I knew, but my experience was being in Europe.


Going to Europe is the best option to gain the experience needed to develop?

Your experience touching, working with professional pattern-makers, watching how it’s done, being careful where and how stuff is produced—it’s very different from here. Many people outsource their production. For example, Alexandre Plokhov. He’s a genius, he would make his own patterns and sew them in front of me. Olivier Theyskens, 21 years old, would be doing fucking bustiers 2 minutes before the show. There’s just this culture that we don’t have here.


How would you describe it? More hustle?

The hustle and the beauty of the artisanal work of the designer. You need to go to Europe, you need to go to Paris, you need to go see the fabrics, you need to go to these fairs, you need to, like—there’s so much to learn. There’s so much. That’s my advice to you. I was lucky to go as a model, and I landed at the right

place. It taught me so much. I had Alexander McQueen fitting all types of fabrics and even plastic on me,

and I’m just like, “oh, that’s cool... Who’s this guy?”—you know? But you learn so much, it’s like also when I had the shoe store, we’d go to the Dries van Noten show and the first appointment the next day would be for my business partner and I to go buy our shoes. You’re presented with over 100 styles in front of you, and you have to make a selection. Dries himself would come to brainstorm with us. He wanted that appointment with us before all the other appointments opened because we were known to be the best shoe store in North America. They have a lot of shoes. It’s overwhelming because you have a lot of shoes and you have to think about sizing. So he would sit there and ask us our opinion on which ones would be the best sellers. We would sit on the floor, and my business partner and I would pick out the shoes that we liked, that we knew we could sell and that were different and—you know me, I’m all in black, our shoe

store was anything but black except for Ann Demeulemeester, which was our best seller (combat boots and everything). So, it’s just an experience. You can’t learn that here.


Let’s say I get this experience in Europe and decide to return, do you think there’s a market here too?

There’s a market all over the world. One of the most important markets is Asia, Russia (believe it or not), Japan—even better experience if you can go do an internship in Japan! Like at UNDERCOVER, Junya Watanabe, or COMME des GARÇONS.


I hear it’s really about the craft in Japan.

It really is about the craft. Take apart a COMME des GARÇONS jacket, it’s a maze. That’s why I love Rei Kawakubo so much; I love what she does. I love UNDERCOVER. I just love what they’re doing, where they’re going. I went to visit Japan. Rick Owens has an agent in Japan because the Japanese don’t speak much English. Communication was very difficult. So because Japan was such a huge market for Rick, they onboarded an agent. Luca and I went to Tokyo to visit the Rick Owens boutique and I was completely hallucinating. It was so beautiful! I actually wanted to go live in Tokyo and learn the language.


Japan sounds like an interesting option too. Now, I have a question: when I start developing my brand, do you think I should begin by doing more production, or should I be doing more in-house, individual pieces?

You can do anything. Focus on fabric, on production, and on marketing.


I understand. But nonetheless, I would have a better chance to develop in Europe?

Montreal’s a great city. Especially for fashion connoisseurs. There’s a lot of talent here when it comes to music, movies—I’m one of the biggest Xavier Dolan fans. There’s also Denis Villeneuve and Jean Marc Vallée, Arcade Fire, Leonard Cohen, and Patrick Watson. So much talent here. Anything that comes out of Montreal, for me, I’m like, “yay yay yay,” you know? Fashion-wise, however... So what would be your price point? Mid-to-high or mid-to-low?


I would definitely start off at an emergent designer price range: something exclusive but also affordable to my consumer. So it would be mid-to-high.

Good. You need to stay strong and do what you believe in. I mean, Olivier Theyskens gave up his name for 10 years because he didn’t want to conform to his financer who bought his name. He stuck to his gut, so he went to work at Theory, then he went to work at Rochas, then Nina Ricci—he moved around a lot. Now, he started his own collection again. It’s not an easy road because Olivier Theyskens thinks that women over size 2 should not wear his clothes. So, it’s very interesting—you have to move abroad. If it’s to study or—I know it’s difficult financially if you think about it, but find a way to get in somewhere.


Do you recommend that I find an internship, or continue my education in Europe?

Either or.


Since I only have a college degree and not a bachelor’s degree, does it really matter as long as I just get the experience?

Get the experience. Go to France or Italy. Even in Milan there are great homes that you can work for. Personally, my dream would be to work with Raf Simons right now. But it’s hard to get in and it would mean me moving back to Europe, right? You need to have a connection somewhere, or go study. I’m being honest with you.


You really motivated me. I already knew this in the back of my mind, and everyone’s always talking about going to Europe, but I needed somebody of your status to just really tell me straightforwardly.

Go to Europe. It’s the biggest blessing I’ve had in my life. I have absolutely no regrets. I wasn’t scared, I was like, “ok let’s do this.” I was a go-getter. Give me anything, I wanted to learn. Give me challenges—“oh, there’s a fork in the road, well let me go see it.” I’ve always been curious. I’ve never been afraid of life. Things just fall into place. When I had my own business, I was still working at Rick Owens, but who was I learning from? Ok I carried the best, but why did I get all these designers that are impossible to get? Because of my status with Rick. And then another store was like, “go see this line—this is an upcoming line,” and we go see it and you block it for exclusivity. That’s what it’s all about: it’s word of mouth, the friends you’ve made. I would tell anybody who wants to succeed in the fashion world to go do an internship, study, get another degree—go to Europe! You’re not gonna learn anything here. What is there in Montreal? There’s SSENSE and Holt Renfrew. What else?





Nothing else, really

Right now there’s nothing really new happening. You know, Rick plateaued, now the challenge is to stabilize. His fashion shows are shock value, fun, and artistic, but where they make the money is in the pre-collection and denim collection, which he has nothing to do with.


That’s so interesting considering how big he‘s gotten. How did he initially start off?

Rick was in LA struggling to be a designer. He had a talent. Tommy at Maxfield saw it and financed him, Maria-Louisa (who passed away sadly), one of the most important stores in Paris, saw it, Henry Bendel saw it, but nobody else understood it. I remember doing 3 showrooms in a row. The buyers would come in—because Rick likes the dilapidated, condemned buildings without heating, and with pigeons flying in. These top buyers in the world would walk in and dust was just everywhere. We’re covered in dust. The buyers were covered in dust and were like, “what the hell is this?” He didn’t care. He sticks to his gut.


And then people eventually embraced him—that’s encouraging.

Yeah! It wasn’t easy, but the biggest lesson I’ve learned in life is teamwork. You’re gonna meet a lot of people with arrogance, chips on their shoulders; you need to learn to swim with the crocodiles, sleep in snake pits—it’s not easy. I was very lucky: because I was a senior, I was very protected. Even at that, the other employees were still doing things because everybody’s jealous of what you have. You have to learn to push that energy out, you know? It’s a rough world, but there’s nothing in Montreal. I’m being really honest with you, there’s nothing in Montreal.


I really appreciate the honesty. Every aspiring designer thinks about this— whether to stay home or go to Europe. But now you’ve made me realize the best choice.

Even if you can go do an internship at Balenciaga. I mean, I don’t like Balenciaga but they created something so big that I’m still studying it. But I love Nicolas Ghesquière Balenciaga. Like, when we finished work, my best friend and I would run to the Balenciaga store and get their jeans and their jacket—you have no idea! I carried it in the stores. I remember I used to drive Luca crazy: he’s like, “what’s this Balenciaga stuff?”


But not Demna Gvasalia?

No, I think it’s a joke. I think they’re actually quite funny. However, they somehow did it and conquered the market.


It’s interesting because he’s on top of the world right now, you know? You can’t open social media without seeing Balenciaga. it’s everywhere!

The funny thing that I learned just recently: I was researching a lot of streetwear stores and I study SSENSE a lot. I always go check it out, but I find at SSENSE you get lost! There’s just so much, you just get lost! All the websites have just too much. You start looking at some designers that you like and then you go look at upcoming designers and you’re just like, “it’s two- dimensional.” I want to touch it, I want to see it, I want a person to serve me. I don’t know if you understand, I think you’re young, so you’re used to the two-dimensional online shopping.


Personally, it’s difficult for me to order expensive garments online. I also need to first interact with the item and try it on before I consider buying. After all, it needs to fit an ideal image of myself. That’s what fashion is to me: expressing your ideal self.

Exactly!

 

Conversation transcript and editing Gio Caci Images Connory Ballantyne

 

We kindly invite you to purchase our products and RSVP to our events. By doing so, you contribute to our thriving community and enable us to create even more amazing learning experiences for fashion creatives. Your continued patronage is deeply appreciated, and we thank you for being a part of our journey.

Originally published in LIGNES DE FUITE vol.3


Updated: Oct 8, 2023

With the aim of realizing its mission to unleash the potential of up-and-coming creative minds through its incubator program, LIGNES DE FUITE has introduced the "Words of Advice" interview series. This ongoing series brings together promising talents nurtured by the program and influential figures from diverse industries, providing a platform for in-depth discussions on strategies for success within their respective fields. In a recent installment, the renowned Belgian textile creator Daniel Henry engages in a captivating Q&A session with the aspiring fashion designer William Crosson. This dynamic conversation occurred at the Centre Design et Impression Textile and delved into the distinctions between the fashion scenes in Montreal and Antwerp.


Connory Ballentyne, William Crosson , Daniel Henry : With the aim of realizing its mission to unleash the potential of up-and-coming creative minds through its incubator program, LIGNES DE FUITE has introduced the "Words of Advice" interview series. This ongoing series brings together promising talents nurtured by the program and influential figures from diverse industries, providing a platform for in-depth discussions on strategies for success within their respective fields. In a recent installment, the renowned Belgian textile creator Daniel Henry engages in a captivating Q&A session with the aspiring fashion designer William Crosson. This dynamic conversation occurred at the Centre Design et Impression Textile and delved into the distinctions between the fashion scenes in Montreal and Antwerp.
William Crosson: I’d like to start off by gaining some insight into how you started your career, specifically, how did you start your own design studio?

Daniel Henry: I started fashion design at La Cambre in Brussels but I quickly realized that I was more interested by the materials than the shape. When I was in second year, I decided to change and go into the textile department. That is why my textile work has always been connected to the body and very inspired by the movement and the transparency. I did the first year in fashion and then four years in textiles, studying weaving, knitting, printing and finishings but specialized in printing and finishing. That's mostly what I do today.


At the end of each year we had a jury for the examination. When I was in 4th year (now called Master One) there was a lady that was invited to be on the jury specifically because she would be interested in my work. It’s a very small school, there are not many students, and the teachers try to invite people that will be interested in your work. At that time, I was developing a more conceptual work about linen. This was about 20 years ago. I was trying to introduce linen into winter collections because we know it as a summer fiber.


I would work on the knitting part of the linen and 20 years ago that was really unusual. Today it's quite normal to see linen jersey, but 20 years ago it was not.


They invited this lady from CELC in Paris, which is the European Confederation of Linen and Hemp. It's kind of like Woolmark for linen. At the end of the jury she said she really liked my work and she said “I have a job for you.” It was in June and she said you can start in July but you need to be a freelancer. She knew that I had one more year of school to complete. She said, that's fine, you can work part-time for me. It was a two-year contract. So I said okay. I was supposed to go on an internship at McQueen that summer.


I had to decide to either get the job with the CELC or lose a lot of money in London. So I took the CELC job and I started my freelance status at that time. My transition between school and professional work was very fluid. I started my studio one year before my graduation almost 22 years ago.




I feel like that’s a rare experience coming out of school and immediately picking up this freelance work. But why textiles? You were studying fashion for a year— however, after your first year you decided to focus on textiles. At an institutional level is there a way for you to transition into studying textiles and are there specific programs at an undergrad level in Europe that made this transition easy for you?

To reply to the first question, when you were a student in La Cambre during the first three years (today called the BA) we had to do two mandatory internships inside of the school in different departments. When I was in the second year of fashion, I decided to do my internship in textiles. It was a knitting course and on the first day with the knitting machine I just knew it was my place. So the following week I switched. They did not have to accept me in the textile program and could have insisted that I go back to first year. However they allowed me to enter the second year of the textiles program after they looked at my work.


What is your connection to the Centre Design et Impression Textile (CDIT) here in Montreal?

It’s a long story. My printing teacher is a friend of Monique Beauregard, the former director. After my graduation, I became an assistant to my teacher. The following summer my teacher was coming to Montreal to give a workshop, but she had some kind of health problems, so she asked me to come with her. That was my very first connection—I think it was in 2002. I fell in love with Quebec and especially the people. I came back to Quebec maybe seven or eight times for workshops. I also have a very good connection with the Biennale internationale du lin in Portneuf, so I come quite often for one reason or another.

You’ve been coming to Montreal for quite a while then, and it seems as though you’re pretty familiar with the city. Do you see any parallels between the fashion scene here and the fashion scene in a place like Belgium or more specifically Antwerp?

To tell you the truth, I don’t feel like I’m part of the fashion scene. Fashion is really about fashion designers. People from textile, even someone like me who is very connected to fashion in my work, I’m not so connected with the fashion people.


I don’t know.


In Belgium or in Paris they never accepted me as a member of the fashion community. That’s just the way it is—I am OK with it. So I don’t really know what’s happening.


I would like show you some of my work if we could?

Yes of course!

A lot of my work revolves around Canadiana and the Canadian identity. So often we see Canada and America being lumped into one entity, whereas I feel like that’s not the reality. It’s interesting because especially in Quebec there is such a strong national identity. But I’m not from Quebec, I’m from Ontario. So it feels like, at least in those spaces, there’s not quite as much of a separation or cultural identity. I think a lot of my work focuses on that and is carried out by taking elements that we see every day, almost mundane elements and elevating them through the craft. Going back to the idea that Canada and America are seen as a homogenous culture through globalization, and through a shared history, do you think there’s a comparison to be made between a homogenous world view of North America and a homogenous world view of Europe? Or do you feel like there’s still a distinct separation between an industry like the textile industry in the UK versus France versus Belgium versus Italy?


I think every one of those the fashion capitals have their own identity that is really strong. I work mostly with French brands. Creativity is different in all of those countries.


If you look at the fashion in Italy for me it’s more focused on colors and also patterns, but not always.


If you look in the UK there are some really eccentric looks, but in the same collection there are always some very commercial looks.


Belgium is where I come from so it’s a much younger fashion capital. And we all know about the Antwerp Six, and for me, even if that was not really long ago, because it’s like 40 years ago.


I feel that today there are two directions in young creation and innovation in Belgium. There is the more conceptual and minimalistic fashion like Martin Margiela, Raf Simons, Ann Demeulemeester, and so on. On the other side, there is the more fun fashion like Walter van Beirendonck, Bernhard Willhelm, and Jean-Paul Lespagnard. 40 years ago it was really free because there was no past in fashion. Now that there is the strong Antwerp Six there is now two styles that we have to follow. So the sense of freedom is not the same anymore. In 40 years fashion has changed a lot. When I was a student in the 90’s the fashion was really artistic. Today it is so much about business. Before, business was really in America, for example, in New York. Nowadays we see a big difference between even Los Angeles and New York. Montreal, I don’t know so much.


Credits:

 

Images Connory Ballantyne Daniel Henry and William Crosson Transcript William Crosson Editing Gio Cacci

 

Follow the link below to RSVP to our upcoming Drink&Draw and see you soon!



Take a look at our upcoming short courses and workshops.



Originally published in LIGNES DE FUITE vol.3



Updated: Feb 25, 2023

Current Director of the BFA Fashion Design program and Assistant Professor

at Parsons School of Design, New York, Marie-Geneviève Cyr Informs Fashion Scholar in the Making, Roxanne Ouellet-Bernier, about the Future of Fashion Education





Briefly in Montréal to take part in a discussion on fashion transparency in physical and digital spaces, as part of the École supérieure de mode de l’ESG-UQAM fashion symposium, I had the opportunity to meet with Marie-Geneviève Cyr to find out about her perspective on fashion education.


We see many people making it into the fashion industry, and probably just as many, if not actually more, that decide to abandon it for many different avenues. I am extremely curious to learn more about your perspective, and most specifically on the fashion education system itself. I wanted to start this interview by asking you how relevant do you think it is to go through fashion school to make it into the industry?

I mean for me, you go to school for yourself, because you want to actually discover about yourself. When you start and enter any school, or fashion school especially, you don’t know what kind of designer you’ll be. You’ll need to be super open, because it’s going to take time for you to discover who you are, your methods of working, and who you want to be in the fashion industry. For me, it is super important to go through an education that’s going to help you flourish, and how you’re translating identity through, perhaps, design. I feel like if you don’t go through an education, you’re just going to reappropriated everything that is wrong in the industry. I don’t think you will find a way for you to really study and learn from different theories and history.


When you go through a system of education, you’re learning so much about your peers—this is probably one of the most important things in education. You’re not just learning from the professors, you’re learning from everybody else that’s in your class. The aspect of a group setting, or collective, is extremely important for the development of designing and identities. I feel like we need human beings to find who we are in our relationship and understanding of the world, and how it has an impact on us as well, as creatives.


Obviously, you’re asking somebody who’s the director of the BFA in fashion program. It’s a big machine, but the thing is, like in education, we’ve been really trying to diversify what it means to be a fashion designer. There’re so many different roles. As a fashion designer you’re a professional, a social, and an artistic human being at the same time. You’re connecting the industry, society, and artistic practices as well. It’s all about applicable skills, and I think it’s super important that you remain extremely open, because not everybody that goes to fashion school will become a fashion designer. You’ll become creatives, yes, but possibly in different fields as well.


When we think about fashion education, I find we often consider schools like CSM, Parsons, IFM, but there are actually so many more options and paths to choose from. How important do you think it is to actually go to a major fashion institution, and what’s their place nowadays?

I think it’s important to do a lot of research in terms of what you want to do as well. CSM has a completely different identity from Parsons, that is more social based, because of the history of our affiliation with the New School. For me, the most interesting thing is to really look at other fashion design schools around the world. Look at what they’re doing and what they’re growing. What about doing this MA in digital fashion in Romania, or what about going to Brazil in this amazing school?


For me, it’s been very interesting because I’ve travelled a lot to China, Vietnam, and Cambodia to do all these works with young creatives. I think that’s important not only to provide access, but to exchange with others and empower them to develop who they want to be. There’s amazing things happening all over the world that we probably don’t know about, all because it’s not being promoted through westernised channels. It’s really about communication and research that students need to do on their part.


You’re from Gaspésie, which isn’t too far from where I’m from, and I often find it is far from Québec’s mentality, or at least its most rural part, to be truly enticed about leaving. We discussed how you’ve travelled pretty much around the world, and you’ve been living in New York for a while now. How would you say that displacing yourself has had an influence on who you are, and how do you reconnect?

This is something I’ve been thinking about a lot recently. I left when I was 17, right after high school. I was counting the months to leave because I hated it, and I knew I was not meant to be there. I went to Montréal first, then the UK, and then through a lot of different places. I’ve always been attracted to cities, and I absolutely need and love nature, but I don’t like in-betweens at all. One thing that I’ve been thinking about in recent years: one of my uncles was the director of the Gaspésie museum for a long time and he’s the editor of the Gaspésie magazine on history. He actually interviewed me for the magazine and it was really interesting to kind of reconnect. Certain things that I do, like nature and advertisement, history and craft, comes from where I’m from. I was really interested in looking at if there was any fashion moment in Gaspésie and I discovered that in the 50s there was this important series of photographs for Claire McCardell, who is this huge American designer that revolutionised ready-to-wear in New York City. She did an amazing photoshoot at Percy Rock, which we discovered in the National Canadian Archive.


I would never have thought, but apparently, in the 50s and 60s, Gaspésie was this exotic place for American fashion designers to go and shoot their collections, which is very interesting, because when we think about Gaspésie, we don’t think about fashion. Landscape is what attracts a lot of people and we see a lot of this in fashion now because this idea of nature is being utilised all the time, especially in fashion presentations.


When we first met, you mentioned how surprised you were at how people are seamingly wearing very little local designers here. Do you have any advice, for designers and fashion students, on how they could possibly counter and change this behaviour?

It’s sort of a relationship. It starts with your friends, obviously. The way my wardrobe is, and a lot of the pieces that I have, is because I know the designer. I know that for me it’s all about how I connect to certain things. Of course there’s some vintage pieces from people I don’t know, but I try as much as possible to have some connection because for me that is so much more meaningful. As for fashion objects, if you know who made that or who designed that, it’s this reconnection that we have to work on as well.


As a young fashion designer, you want your friend to be able to wear it as well, but you also want the retailers in Québec to be able to support the young generation. There are a lot of fashion schools, like the Amsterdam Fashion Institute, who have a store where they are actually selling students’ collections, which they rotate. These are interesting systems that perhaps UQAM or other fashion schools, or anybody in the government really, could take notes from. Perhaps, they could organise pop-up shops with alumni graduates from the past 3-4 years, where they could showcase and sell their work. I think in Québec these pop-up moments probably work better as a system than just a physical retail store. I think there is a need for a system that schools should support, sort of like an incubator for emerging designers and fashion students. As an educator, I see it as my responsibility to support and wear what Parsons

alumni create.


We mentioned your role as a Director of the BFA Fashion Design program at Parsons, a title you hold while also being an assistant professor, a mentor, and a fashion designer. How do you manage to do all these roles, while also keeping a certain sense of balance in your life?

Online, I have become a professional categorizer, note taker, with many tabs open at the same time. It’s something that is happening in my physical reality as well. I work on one project, then another, working on a book, on caftans, and I do have to stop as well.


I’m really much more of a project based person. I don’t like long projects, and I can see how that’s happening for your generation as well. I find it’s no longer these long seasonal collections—nobody cares about this anymore. It’s all about this series of ideas you’re developing constantly and I feel it’s similar to what I do in my research. I do one thing, then I do another project, and so on. I try to sleep and I try to eat, and stay healthy, as I always say to the students. So I had to also practise this for myself a little bit. I’m also learning how to say no because, in the past, I was someone who would say yes to a lot of projects. It’s important to focus on what you want, and what matters the most for you as a creative.


Being the director, I manage over 850 students, I teach a class of 17 students, I’m on all these committees, and it’s quite a lot to be honest. I’m exhausted right now and clearly I’m getting older by the minute, but I love what I do. Even in the summer, I want to do all these projects, research and teaching workshops, and all these things all over Asia. I guess I like to be busy. I’ve always liked to be busy. That’s what brought me where I am today, it’s because I never stopped. One day, maybe, I’ll retire and stop completely. But not now, obviously.


What’s the future for fashion education?

I think of their futures with an S. Fashion is being so scattered at the moment, which is a good thing. We cannot just go any longer about simply making clothes, because fashion can be all these other things. I think there’s this space for innovation, for things that we haven’t figured out yet because we haven’t defined the role of fashion, or its relationships, in the post-internet. We’re still doing fashion in the same way as 100 years ago, we’re still doing pattern cutting, and sewing with a sewing machine or by hand. We’re still doing these things that are so ancient.


For me there’s a space for the future of fashion, and I feel like we’re going to see more and more education programs that offer all these niche ways of approaching fashion. I also think that students will learn the importance of building collectives, co-creations, and collaborations because you can’t live without that. You cannot just innovate in a basement by yourself. I always put my students in situations where they must collaborate because it’s extremely important to acquire that skillset. Education doesn’t really teach you that at the beginning, which can then create frictional times, when the time comes for team projects.


I think there is often this idea of performance and grades in education, which I’m the first to fall pray for. I’ve always felt like it should not have such an important place in programs that encourage creativity.

Exactly. This is something that needs to be rethought, for educators, but for students as well.

 

Originally published in LIGNES DE FUITE Vol.3







bottom of page