Gucci Calls for End to Separation of the Sexes on the Runway.
Follow @Mazana17The move toward mixed gender fashion shows is getting a big-name boost — from Gucci. On Tuesday at The New York Times International Luxury conference in Versailles, France, Marco Bizzarri, chief executive of the brand, called for an end to separation of the sexes, or at least to their collections. From 2017, he said, the anchor brand of the Kering group will no longer hold different shows for men’s and women’s wear, but will rather combine the two into a single show, to be held each season.
“Moving
to one show each season will significantly help to simplify many
aspects of our business,” Mr. Bizzarri said. “Maintaining two separate,
disconnected calendars has been a result of tradition rather than
practicality.” Men’s wear shows and sales to wholesalers are now held in
January and July, and the women’s in September/October and
February/March.
The
move follows similar announcements from Burberry (which will combine
its men’s and women’s shows starting in September), Tom Ford (ditto) and
the French brand Vetements (which will have a joint show in January
2017), all geared to close what brands say is a growing, and costly, gap between modern consumer expectations and the traditional fashion system.
However, unlike those brands, which have said that they will also
immediately sell the clothes they show — or, in Vetements’s case, close
to immediately — Gucci does not plan to change its production calendar:
It will show clothes that will be available six months later.
Call
it show-everything-now/sell-later. It’s more radical than it sounds,
because of Gucci’s size (it reported revenue of 3.9 billion euros, or
$4.4 billion, in 2015, and has 525 wholly owned stores around the world)
and its current position as a trend leader.
“It
is really being looked to as a trailblazer in the industry,” said Julie
Gilhart, a consultant and the former fashion director of Barneys New
York. “That makes this move potentially the most disruptive change yet.”
On
its face, unifying men’s and women’s wear makes sense, and not just
because most consumers think of men’s and women’s wear as one category
(“clothes”). Combining the collections creates obvious efficiencies,
most clearly in the cost of a show, which can reach €1 million.
In addition, at a time when men’s and women’s wear are getting ever closer together — with Louis Vuitton putting Jaden Smith in its women’s wear ad campaign in women’s wear, unisex clothing on the rise,
and the creative director of Gucci, Alessandro Michele, often including
men in his women’s show and vice versa — combining the two underscores
the message of a single brand aesthetic across genders.
“It will give me the chance to move towards a different kind of approach to my storytelling,” Mr. Michele said in a statement.
However,
there is an institutional and municipal argument against combining the
men’s and women’s weeks. Every fashion week city profits, literally and
significantly, from playing host to the collections. Each season brings
floods of buyers, critics and support staff into each city, providing a
financial boon for related industries. According to a 2012 analysis by
the New York City Economic Development Corporation, women’s wear weeks
there alone have a “total economic impact per year of $887 million.”
No wonder why, in July 2015, New York Fashion Week: Men’s was introduced, following London Collections Men, which made its debut
in 2012. (Previously, men’s wear had its own official weeks only in
Milan and Paris, along with the Pitti Uomo trade show in Florence.) The
first New York men’s week brought 3,000 people to the city.
It
is not yet confirmed exactly when the joint Gucci show would take
place, but given that men’s wear now accounts for 35 percent of Gucci
sales while women’s represents 65 percent, odds are the combined show
would take place during the women’s season.
If
so, the absence of a brand like Gucci from Milan men’s week could leave
a gaping hole in the schedule for many buyers, and, along with the
Internet’s ease of access to shows, may create a convincing argument for
some buyers and critics not to attend — or at least it may reduce the
number who do.
Mr. Bizzarri said Gucci was working closely with the Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana, the governing body of Milan Fashion Week, but nothing had been decided yet.
According
to Carlo Capasa, president of the Camera della Moda, “Given that the
calendar situation is always evolving, it is hard to predict if there
will be any negative effects.’’ The important thing, he said, is that
the Italians “show powerful vitality as a whole” — perhaps (it is
possible to imagine) by being the first to shift to a new system.
One striking thing about Gucci’s announcement is how many unresolved questions there are about the logistics.
Would
the house, for example, invite men’s and women’s critics to the same
show in September? Queried directly, Mr. Bizzarri said he did not know
yet.
What
would it mean for multibrand boutiques and department stores sending
men’s wear buyers to shows in July? Would they send them again in
September? “I don’t know,” Mr. Bizzarri said with a laugh, though given
that 82 percent of Gucci’s 2015 sales were in their own stores — and
that ready-to-wear accounts for only 11 percent of its sales — perhaps it does not matter.
Still,
despite all the uncertainty, he said the decision was easy to make. “It
just seemed obvious,” he said. “It’s clear something needs to change.
Why not start with this?”
It
remains to be seen whether other Kering brands like Bottega Veneta,
Yves Saint Laurent and Alexander McQueen, all of which show on both the
men’s and women’s wear schedules, will follow suit. Right now, the group
is treating Gucci as a test case, which may only add to the general
confusion.
“It
would be one thing if it all changed at once,” Ms. Gilhart said. “But
everyone’s going off in different directions. It’s like the wild, wild
West.”
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