Yves Saint Laurent
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Yves Saint Laurent , 1936-, French fashion designer, b. Algeria as Yves Henri Donat Mathieu-Saint-Laurent. He established houses of couture and boutiques in Paris and New York. He was the foremost assistant to Christian Dior and became his designated successor as head of the House of Dior at the age of 21. His early collections were noted for their extreme, maverick quality. He opened his own Paris house in 1961, featuring the "chic beatnik" look; knitted turtlenecks; thigh-length boots; and short jackets. He revolutionized the fashion world by creating trousers and broad-shouldered suits that were images of power for women. His other designs include sophisticated tweed suits, the Mondrian dress, pleated skirts, safari jackets, updated peasant costumes, le smoking (tuxedos for women), and heavy costume jewelry. His focus on an androgynous look was extremely influential in the fashion of the 1970s. He also designed for the Ballets de Roland Petit. By the mid-1970s, at the height of his success, his design empire included sweaters, neckties, eyeglass cases, linens, children's clothes, and fragrances. Gucci acquired his ready-to-wear and cosmetics divisions in 2000. Saint Laurent retired and closed his house in 2002.
Bibliography: See D. Teboul, Yves Saint Laurent: 5, Avenue Marceau, 75116 Paris (2002); A. Drake, The Beautiful Fall: Lagerfeld, Saint Laurent, and Glorious Excess in 1970s Paris (2006); two documentary films dir. by D. Teboul, one of the same title as his book, the other Yves Saint Laurent: His Life and Times (both: 2003).
Author not available, SAINT LAURENT, YVES.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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THE IoS PROFILE: Yves Saint Laurent - The legend in every woman's wardrobe When he took over Dior at 21, he was the youngest-ever couturier. At 65, he's still defining the way we dress
The Independent - London; 8/19/2001; Susannah Frankel; 787 words
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Yves Saint Laurent: the man who loved women.
Town & Country; 5/1/2002; Fiori, Pamela; 787 words
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YVES SAINT LAURENT
The Independent - London; 6/3/2008; Linda Watson; 787 words
; Paris couturier who was revered as a genius but considered himself a 'crazy mixed-up man' Revered internationally as the most important couturier of modern times, Yves Saint Laurent was a master of feminine tailoring who rewrote the rule book on the way women dress. His style, although occasionally
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The man who dressed the world bows out As Yves Saint Laurent prepares to hang up his measuring tape, Susannah Frankel charts the career of fashion's living legend
The Independent - London; 1/6/2002; Susannah Frankel; 787 words
; At a packed press conference at midday tomorrow in Paris, Yves Saint Laurent, the last great couturier, is expected to announce his retirement. By the time he addresses the assembled press, speculation about the announcement will have become frenzied, but yesterday his office still would not
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The man who left his mark on every catwalk; As Yves Saint Laurent says farewell to fashion after 40 years...
The Evening Standard (London, England); 1/23/2002; Craik, Laura; 558 words
; Byline: LAURA CRAIK IT IS tempting to forget the huge impact Yves Saint Laurent has had on fashion. Women take for granted the easiness of the modern wardrobe - before Saint Laurent, trouser suits were almost unheard of as suitable female attire. He liberated women from the confines of restrictive
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