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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Dior’s Maria Grazia Chiuri on the Value of Indian Craft

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 31 March 2023

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

At Istituto Marangoni in Mumbai, the artistic director discussed the influence of Indian craft on her collections.


Background


This week, Christian Dior presented its pre-fall 2023 collection at the Gateway of India monument in Mumbai, marking the first standalone show from a European luxury megabrand in the country.


It was a historic occasion for fashion in India, which is projected to soon become the world’s fastest-growing major economy, according to the International Monetary Fund. With that, Dior’s appearance in Mumbai could prove to be a seminal moment: When Fendi staged a show at the Great Wall of China in 2007, it helped catalyse more than a decade of growth in the Chinese luxury market. 


This week on The BoF Podcast, Maria Grazia Chiuri, the artistic director of women's at Christian Dior since 2016, sits down with BoF’s Imran Amed at the Istituto Marangoni in Mumbai to discuss the show, her intimate relationship with India and appreciation for Indian artisanship. 


“India has a huge history, a 6000-year history in textile style and embroidery,” said Chiuri. “This is part of the culture.”


Key Insights:


  • For Chiuri, Dior’s Mumbai show was the culmination of a long-held ambition to present a collection in India due to her love for the country’s traditional artisans. “We are really happy because it’s a dream that we’ve had for a long time. It's very personal for me … it is not a simple fashion show,” she said. 
  • More than just showing the collection in the city, Chiuri wove local artisans’ creativity into the collection through an ongoing partnership with The Chanakya School of Craft, co-creating intricately embroidered clothing with references to India’s rich cultural heritage. “We’re creating a new kind of modern embroidery that was not done before,” she said. 
  • When Chiuri met Karishma Swali, managing director of the Mumbai-based export atelier Chanakya International and the founder of the The Chanakya School of Craft, on her first trip to India, it sparked a friendship which has spanned over two decades, as well as numerous professional collaborations. “This is an important collaboration that I’ve had for a long time with Karishma, with this incredible family and company …  I started to work with them in 1992,” Chiuri said. “We grew up together … our creativity and our discussions were so important in my career.”


Additional Resources:





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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion.

0:08.2

Welcome to the Bof podcast. It's Friday, March 31st.

0:12.5

This week was a historic moment for fashion, for India, and for fashion in India, as Christian Dior showed its pre-fall 2023 collection at the historic

0:22.8

Gateway of India Monument in Bombay.

0:25.7

Back in 2007, Fendi did a show at the Great Wall of China, which set off more than a decade

0:30.7

of growth and excitement for the Chinese fashion market.

0:34.3

This feels like a similarly important moment for India, which will be the fastest growing

0:38.8

major economy in the world over the next few years. But the fashion industry has a long history

0:44.2

in India, often hidden away in the background. For decades, major luxury brands have been making

0:50.2

some of their most sophisticated, intricate and special pieces here, only then to take them

0:55.7

back to Europe for final assembly and to label them made in France, or made in Italy.

1:01.7

But Maria Grazie Curie, the artistic director of Women's at Christian Dior, has taken an altogether

1:07.2

different approach, making the work she does here in India part of the Dior story,

1:12.6

and putting a spotlight on the incredible Indian artisans whose creativity and talent makes

1:18.4

these creations possible.

1:20.2

This week on the BOF podcast, I'm sharing a conversation I had with Maria Grazia at the

1:25.1

Instituto Marengoni in Bombay in front of more than 200 students

1:29.4

and industry professionals from across India. Here's Maria Grazie Curie on the BOF podcast.

1:37.8

Maria Grazie Curie, how are you feeling today? We are really happy because we worked very hard with all the team, but also because

1:48.5

it's a dream that we have from a long time.

1:52.8

This show is for me, it's very personal, like you say.

1:55.7

It's not a simple fashion show.

...

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