The beginnings of Chanel's fashion brand lie in the
French seaside resorts. In 1912, Coco-then still
Gabrielle-Chanel opened her first boutique in Deauville;
shops in Biarritz, Monte Carlo and Cannes soon followed.
There, her simple, sporty designs met with a
cosmopolitan clientele who carried her fashion back to
the capital, Paris. In the 1920s, the Chanel brand thus
experienced its first heyday, driven by the artistic and
social upheaval of those years, the Roaring Twenties.
This lavishly illustrated catalogue documents in drawings
and photographs the extraordinary productivity of
the designer who maintained friendships with artists
such as Jean Cocteau, Pablo Picasso and others. In the
1920s, Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes were performing
on the Riviera. The book reveals the Slavic influence
in Chanel's creations, highlighting a network of correspondences
with female artists close to Diaghilev's circle,
such as Natalia Goncharova and Sonia Delaunay.
The book also features La Pausa, Gabrielle Chanel's
dream villa built in 1929 near Monaco.
GABRIELLE CHANEL erased all traces of her childhood. The only known fact is that she was born in Saumur (France) on August 19, 1883. In 1910, she opened a hat store in Paris, which was followed by boutiques in Deauville, Biarritz, Cannes and Monte-Carlo. Her line of jersey sportswear for women revolutionized fashion and liberated the female body.
¿ Coco Chanel's beginnings in the vibrant 1920s
¿ The role of seaside resorts in Chanel's characteristic style
¿ Interdisciplinary influences on her work