Karl lagerfeld biography vogue italian
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Karl Lagerfeld is the master of reinvention, having repeatedly transformed himself as well as his labels. He is currently the creative director of Chanel, Fendi and his eponymous label. He has previously designed for Chloe and created a range for H&M.
- Karl Otto Lagerfelt was born in 1933 to a wealthy German businessman father and Swedish mother in pre-war Germany.
- He has one older sister, Martha Christiane, who was born in 1931, and an older half-sister - Thea - from his father's first marriage.
- Lagerfeld changed his original surname from Lagerfeldt,
removing the 't' because - as he wrote in his book, *The Karl
Lagerfeld Diet -* it sounded "more commercial".
- Lagerfeld emigrated to Paris at the age of 14 and studied drawing and history, before becoming a design assistant for Pierre Balmain, and later Jean Patou, working on the haute couture collections.
- He has taken on the role of costume designer for a
number of productions, including LesT • “I talk to Karl every day, just like I used to,” Harlech told me. “Mostly, he would laugh at my slowness to get down to ‘it’—writing, painting, sorting out the piles of books, restoring the Jacobean garden at my home.” “Playing the piano opens cascades of memories,” she continued. “This is when he is really close to me. He always wanted to play. And those moments when I was practicing some Bach or Brahms and he was working in another room seem to be actual, happening igen in real time.” “He gave me a first edition of Virginia Woolf’s Street Haunting. He loved the story and the slim, green volume. But we both loved following her slanting, spiky signature with our finger. igen it was like we defeated linear time and discovered a perpetual, reverberating present.” I once asked Lagerfeld why he never attended the exhibition of his work, Karl Lagerfeld: Modemethode, that Harlech put together at the Bundeskunsthalle in Bonn, Germany, in 2015—a typical reaction from the designer, • Karl Lagerfeld, one of the most prolific and widely popular designers of the 20th and 21st centuries, has died in Paris. He was 85. Lagerfeld was creative director of Chanel, the French house founded by Gabrielle Chanel, for an era-defining, age-defying 36 years. Upon assuming the reins in 1983, Lagerfeld swiftly revived Chanel, reinterpreting the house founder’s iconic tweed skirtsuits, little black dresses, and quilted handbags. He did it via the lens of hip-hop one season and California surfer chicks the next—he was a pop culture savant—without ever forgetting what the revolutionary Coco stood for: independence, freedom, and modernity. In more recent years, as the company’s fortunes grew and grew, Lagerfeld became known for the lavish Grand Palais sets he conceived for the six Chanel collections he designed a year. There was a rocket ship, a reproduction of the Eiffel Tower, and a supermarché stocked strictly with Chanel-brand products. Florence Welch sang on the half-shell a