Gabrielle 'Coco' Chanel is an icon of fashion, and
can lay claim to having invented the look of the 20th
century. At the height of the Belle Epoque, she stripped
women of their corsets and feathers, bobbed their hair,
put them in bathing suits and sent them out to get
tanned in the sun. She introduced the little black
dress; trousers for women; costume jewelry; the
exquisitely comfortable suit that became her trademark.
Early in the Roaring Twenties, Chanel made the first
ever couture perfume - No. 5 - presenting it in the
famous little square-cut flagon that, inspired by
Picasso and Cubism, became the arch symbol of the Art
Deco style. No. 5 remains the most popular scent ever
created. Chanel knew instinctively that the road to
success lay in being absolutely at one with her own
time. And what a time! The era of Picasso, Diaghilev,
Stravinsky, Cocteau, Jean Renoir, Visconti - all of whom
'Coco' knew and collaborated with, even as she matched
their modernist innovations by liberating women from the
prison of 19th-century fashion and creating a whole new
concept of elegance.Chanel went everywhere and knew
everyone and, as this sumptuously illustrated volume
clearly shows, her life and accomplishment - even her
chronic failure in love - constitute one of the great
stories of the modern age. Her life is eminently suited
to the lavish visual treatment of this handsome volume,
which features more than 600 illustrations from an
extraordinary collection amassed over the years by
Edmonde Charles-Roux, Chanel's official biographer and
close friend. An authoritative and practised writer,
Charles-Roux has used careful research and vivid
eyewitness accounts to set the pictures in their context
of time and place. She makes Chanel live again! |
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