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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Karl Lagerfeld at the Met: Designer, Polymath, Jigsaw Puzzle

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Business, Fashion & Beauty, Arts

4.5813 Ratings

🗓️ 21 April 2023

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Ahead of the opening of “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty” exhibition, the Costume Institute’s head curator discusses the legendary designer’s work and lasting impact.


Background:

Andrew Bolton, the head curator of The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute, first dreamed up the idea for a Karl Lagerfeld-centric show at Lagerfeld’s 2019 memorial service.

Next month, that vision will be realised with a new exhibition, “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty,” focussed on the late Chanel and Fendi designer. With the exhibit, set to run from May 5 to July 18, Bolton’s goal was to focus on the designer’s prolific career rather than the man behind it.


“We wanted to focus on the work rather than the words or the man because he was problematic,” said Bolton. “There were those things he said that were difficult … the one thing that was authentic, real and tangible was his creative output.”

This week on The BoF Podcast, BoF editor-at-large Tim Blanks sits down with Bolton to discuss the upcoming show and Lagerfeld’s legacy in fashion and beyond. 


Key Insights:

  • Lagerfeld was a trailblazer in fashion, helping to inspire countless designers who followed him, according to Bolton. “One of Karl's greatest legacies was creating the blueprint for the modern day fashion designer impresario,” said Bolton.
  • His influence transcended fashion, too. “He was somebody who didn't restrict his creativity down to one outlet. He was an interior designer. He was a photographer, he was a writer, he was a theatrical designer as well as a designer,” said Bolton.
  • Bolton said that Lagerfeld was “nostalgic and sentimental,” going as far to recreate his childhood bedroom in his home. That was often reflected in his work, and is examined in the exhibition. “For somebody who loved history so much and consumed history, he could not not look back, and you see those recurring motifs in his work.”
  • Synonymous with Lagerfeld was his signature suit, which featured a severely tailored black jacket and crisp white shirt. Bolton saw that outfit as a simple ensemble not designed to draw attention. “To me, his greatest disguise was a black and white uniform; he created it because it deflected away from anything,” he said.
  • While the exhibition focuses on his work, more of Lagerfeld’s personal life and relationships with collaborators like Amanda Harlech and Patrick Hourcade are detailed in the book that accompanies the show. “I wanted that to be their relationship, their voice,” said Bolton. “They had very specific relationships with Karl, and they're illuminating, but I didn't want that to be infiltrating the thesis of the exhibition.”


Additional Resources:


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

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

0:09.4

Bof podcast. It's Friday, April 21st. Well, we're just a few weeks away from the annual Met Gala,

0:16.3

and of course that means there's a new exhibition to go along with it. This year's exhibition

0:20.7

focuses on the designer, the polymath, the multitasker that was. course, that means there's a new exhibition to go along with it. This year's exhibition focuses

0:21.3

on the designer, the polymath, the multitasker that was Carl Lagerfeld, who over six decades

0:28.0

designed for Chloe, Fendi, Chanel, and of course, his own label. All of these brands are

0:33.5

featured in the latest exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum curated by Andrew Bolton.

0:39.0

On this week's episode of the Bof podcast, Andrew sits down with our editor, Large Tim Blanks,

0:44.3

to give us a sneak peek into how he took the complexity, the mystery, the iconoclasm of Carl Lagerfeld,

0:51.4

and created an exhibition that is sure to be a blockbuster with fashion fans

0:55.6

everywhere.

0:56.7

Here's Andrew Bolton with Tim Blanks on the Bof podcast.

1:03.0

So Andrew Bolton, responsible for some of the greatest fashion exhibitions of our time.

1:14.2

Your next show is about Carl Lagerfeld. It is called Line of Beauty. So let's start there with that title. Yeah, he's inspired by Hogarth's the

1:20.0

analysis of beauty, his 1753 book, where he talked about the line of beauty as being

1:25.8

the septentine line, which he regarded as a movement

1:28.7

that was about liveliness and was about beauty so that's really where it began and when i was

1:35.0

thinking about how to do a show on car he was just he designed his unit for 65 years if you count

1:40.2

the 1954 remarked prize so literally 65 years until he passed away in 2019.

1:46.1

And how would you approach doing a retrospective of one of the most prolific designers of the 20th and 21st

1:54.0

century? And I knew that I didn't want to do it sort of chronologically. And also by the different

1:58.5

houses he designed for. I didn't feel, I didn't feel

...

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