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OST - 111x172 - 1906
Jeanne Paquin (French
pronunciation: [ʒan pakɛ̃]) (1869–1936) was a leading French fashion designer, known for her resolutely modern and
innovative designs. She was the first major female couturier and one of the
pioneers of the modern fashion business.
Jeanne Paquin
was born Jeanne Marie Charlotte Beckers in 1869. Her father was a physician. She
was one of five children.
Sent out to
work as a young teenager, Jeanne trained as a dressmaker at Rouff (a Paris couture house established in
1884 and located on Boulevard Haussmann). She
quickly rose through to ranks becoming première, in charge of the atelier.
In 1891,
Jeanne Marie Charlotte Beckers married Isidore René Jacob, who was also known
as Paquin. Isidore owned Paquin Lalanne et cie, a couture house which had grown
out of a menswear shop in the 1840s. The couple renamed the company Paquin and
set about building the business.
In 1891,
Jeanne and Isidore Paquin opened their Maison de Couture at 3 Rue de la Paix in Paris,
next to the celebrated House of Worth. Jeanne was in charge of design, while
Isidore ran the business.
Initially,
Jeanne favored the pastels in fashion at the time. Eventually, she moved on to
stronger colors like black and her signature red. Black had been
traditionally the color of mourning. Jeanne made the color fashionable by
blending it with vividly colorful linings and embroidered trim.
Jeanne Paquin
was the first couturier to send models dressed in her apparel to public events
such operas and horse races for publicity. Paquin also frequently
collaborated with the illustrators and architects such as Léon Bakst, George Barbier, Robert Mallet-Stevens,
and Louis Süe. She was also known to
collaborate with the theatre, in a time when other houses rejected
collaboration. In 1913, a New York Times reporter
described Jeanne as "the most commercial artist alive".
A London
branch of The House of Paquin was opened in 1896 and the business became a
limited company the same year. This shop employed a young Madeleine Vionnet. The company later expanded with shops in
Buenos Aires and Madrid.
In 1900,
Jeanne was instrumental in organizing the Universal Exhibition and she was
elected president of the Fashion Section. Her designs were featured prominently
at the Exhibition and Jeanne created a mannequin of herself for display.
Isidore Paquin
died in 1907 at the age of 45, leaving Jeanne a widow at 38. Over 2,000 people
attended Isidore's funeral. After Isidore's death, Jeanne dressed mostly in
black and white.
In 1912,
Jeanne and her half-brother opened a furrier, Paquin-Joire, on Fifth Avenue in
New York City. The same year, Jeanne signed an exclusive illustration
contract with La Gazette du Bon Ton. La Gazette du Bon Ton featured
six other leading Paris designers of the day – Louise Chéruit, Georges Doeuillet, Jacques Doucet, Paul Poiret, Redfern & Sons, and the House of Worth.
In 1913,
Jeanne accepted France's prestigious Legion d’Honneur in recognition
of her economic contributions to the country – the first woman designer to
receive the honor. A year later, Jeanne toured the United States. For five
dollars, attendees saw The House of Paquin's latest designs. Despite the high
ticket price, the tour sold out.
During World
War I, Jeanne served as president of the Chambre Syndicale de la Couture. She
was the first woman to serve as president of an employers syndicate in France.
At its height,
the House of Paquin was so well known that Edith Wharton mentioned the company
by name in The House of Mirth.
At a time when
couture houses employed 50 to 400 workers, the House of Paquin employed up to
2,000 people at its apex. The Queens of Spain, Belgium, and Portugal were all
customers of Paquin. So were courtesans such as La Belle Otero and Liane de
Pougy.
When Jeanne
Paquin retired in 1920, she passed responsibility to her assistant Madeleine
Wallis. Wallis remained as house designer for Paquin until 1936, the same year
that Jeanne Paquin died. Between 1936 and 1946, the Spanish designer Ana de
Pombo, Wallis's assistant, was house designer. In 1941, de Pombo left, and her
assistant, Antonio del
Castillo (1908–1984) took over as head designer. In 1945 del
Castillo left Paquin to become a designer for Elizabeth Arden, and would later become head designer for the
house of Lanvin. He was succeeded
by Colette Massignac, who was tasked with the challenge of keeping Paquin going
during the post-War years, when new designers such as Christian Dior were receiving greater publicity and
attention. In 1949, the Basque designer Lou Claverie became
head designer at Paquin, until 1953, when he was succeeded by a young American
designer, Alan Graham. However, Graham's understated designs failed to
reinvigorate the brand of Paquin, and the Paris house closed on 1 July 1956.

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