Gabriela Hearst (née Perezutti; born November 3, 1976) is a Uruguayan women's luxury ready-to-wear and accessories designer. In addition to designing her namesake collection, she runs and operates her family's ranch in Uruguay.[1]
Gabriela Hearst | |
---|---|
Born | Gabriela Perezutti November 3, 1976 |
Nationality | Uruguayan / American |
Alma mater | Universidad ORT Uruguay |
Spouse | John Augustine Hearst |
Children | 3 |
Awards |
|
Early life and education
editHearst grew up on her family's ranch in Paysandú Department, Uruguay which is around 400 km away from the capital city, Montevideo.[2] She attended The British School of Montevideo[3] and graduated from Universidad ORT Uruguay with a B.A. in communications.[4] In her early 20s, after a short period in Paris, she moved to New York to study performing arts at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of Theatre.[1]
Career
editIn 2004, she started Candela in Brooklyn with $700.[5][6] The collection was made of T-shirts with silk-screened illustrations[7] of a winged woman on top of a horse (based on a photo of her mother). In 2006, the collection expanded to ready-to-wear and shoes.[6]
After eleven years working in design, Hearst became a member of the CFDA[8] in 2012.
In fall 2015, Hearst launched her eponymous label: Gabriela Hearst.[1] The brand has been compared as an American competitor to Hermès[9] for its high-quality and fine use of garments.[10] The collections are characterized by quality craftsmanship,[11] high-end[2] and innovative materials,[12][13] such as the anti-radiation fabric that shields against the radiation emitted by mobile phones—introduced in the Resort 2017 collection as lining for the jacket pockets[9]—or the ultra-fine 14.5 micron merino wool[13] and the aloe-treated linen introduced in the Resort 2018 collection, a sustainable and utilitarian process that instantly softens the linen and gives the fabric the property to moisturize the skin.[14] Also the production is very attentive to the environment[13] and sustainability,[15] including the use of wool coming from Hearst's sheep farm in Uruguay, an end-to-end production cycle that helps minimizing the environmental impact.[14] Hearst is also the first brand that make use of Tipa compostable bio-plastics for all their packaging[16]—an Israeli startup that is developing a flexible alternative to plastic that can be thrown into compost to decompose in 24 weeks.[17]
Her line's first bag was the Nina Bag (named after Nina Simone),[15] which started as a limited edition of 20[18] that Hearst gave to women she admired—some of them high-profile like Miroslava Duma and Brie Larson[19]—as well as to women she enjoyed collaborating with, such as the owner of the factory or the shoe developer.[15] The bag had an extensive waiting list as of 2017.[18]
In January 2016, Hearst was included in the "Ten of Tomorrow" by Women's Wear Daily (WWD).[2]
On September 9, 2017, Gabriela Hearst was added to the Business of Fashion BOF500 2017—the professional index of the people shaping the global fashion industry.
In January 2019, LVMH Luxury Ventures, the fund launched by French luxury giant LVMH to support "already iconic" emerging brands, invested in Gabriela Hearst, allowing the brand to expand their presence around the world. Since the fund creation in 2017, this investment is the first in a creative label.[20][21]
In January 2021 Hearst designed the dress worn by First Lady Dr. Jill Biden for the 2021 presidential inauguration: an ivory dress representing the new administration's message of unity that was embroidered with each of the 50 state's flowers and that of D.C.[22]
In December 2021 Hearst was nominated by the Financial Times as one of the 25 most influential women of the year.[23]
In January 2023, the Gabriela Hearst ensemble worn by First Lady Dr. Jill Biden to the 2021 presidential inauguration evening celebration[24] joined the Smithsonian's First Ladies Collection at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History's. The ensemble includes an ivory double-breasted cashmere coat, an ivory silk wool cady dress and face mask, with embroidery reflecting the federal flowers from every state and territory of the U.S. as a symbol of unity.
Hearst designed the costumes for the world premiere of female-first Carmen at San Francisco Ballet as part of Dos Mujeres, the company’s first-ever double bill of works by Latina choreographers. In her stage design debut, Hearst created the costumes crafted entirely from merino wool, the most sustainable fabric.[25]
In March 2024, TIME announced Hearst as one of the honorees of the 2024 TIME Earth Awards, which recognizes individuals influencing the future of the planet through their work on climate justice, awareness, and activism.[26]
Chloé
editIn December 2020 Hearst was named Creative Director of Chloé,[27] the luxury prêt-à-porter brand launched in 1952 by Gaby Aghion. Gabriela Hearst is the first female designer with a multicultural heritage to both Uruguay and the United States to take the helm of a Paris fashion house.[28]
For her debut collection at Chloé, Hearst paid homage to the founder of the maison, Gaby Aghion, in the year of the brand's centenary with a collection that focuses on sustainability. The scalloped details, which Aghion applied to a cotton piqué dress in her 1960 show at Brasserie Lipp appeared as top-stitching on georgette blouses, in leather petals or patchwork denim, as a quilting technique, and along the cuffs of knitwear. The Broderie anglaise is transformed from classic to contemporary as a knitwear, and as a leather edge while the iconic Edith Bag has been reissued repurposing 50 vintage bags bought on eBay.[29] Hearst also collaborated with nonprofit founder Bass Timmer to create backpacks made from deadstock, whose sales will donate two Sheltersuits (a garment with a technical outer shell that can be turned into a sleeping bag) to homeless people.[30]
Sustainability
editOn February 14, 2017,[31] Gabriela Hearst presented its first runway show at the Refectory of the High Line Hotel.[13] The Angela Davis–inspired collection,[32] while luxurious, had a non-wasteful approach.[13] The catwalk show was aimed at minimizing the environmental waste through a no-plastic policy,[33] furnished with pews and chairs borrowed from her home and office. Cashmere pillows for guests were knitted by the nonprofit organization Manos del Uruguay from excess yarn from her previous collection[34] and seven sets of clothes were made with existing fabrics and materials.[13]
With FW18 collection, Hearst became the first brand to introduce compostable bio-plastics for all their packaging.[35] A flexible alternative to plastic that can be thrown into compost to decompose in 24 weeks, developed by an Israel startup called TIPA Sustainable Packaging.[36][37]
For spring/summer 2020, Gabriela Hearst became the first brand to stage a carbon-neutral fashion. In collaboration with Bureau Betak and EcoAct, an international advisory council that works with businesses to address sustainability challenges, Hearst worked on reducing the carbon footprint of her show.[38] This has been possible by booking models that did not have to fly, using catering services that cook with local and seasonal food, and reducing all the appliances backstage. In addition, she will be offsetting emissions by donating the energy costs associated with production to the Hifadhi-Livelihoods Project in Kenya, a country where Hearst has traveled in the past with Save the Children. The offset funds will be used to provide modern, efficient cookstoves to families in Kenya's Embu and Tharaka Nithi counties, cutting down on wood usage and the noxious fumes that accompany it, which primarily impact women and children.[39]
Looking forward to the future of sustainability, with SS20 collection Hearst introduced the digital identity for collections—in partnership with Eon. The digital identity connects all products with a QR Code providing each garment's origin, material, production process and carbon footprint of the product. This technology provides customers more transparency about the clothes and better understanding on how to recycle the products in a move toward a circular fashion economy.[40]
AW20 collection was themed around "waste".[41] Products have been made from repurposed Turkish kilim remnants to make outerwear, old pieces from Hearst stock disassembled and reconstructed and 30% of the collection has been made with recycled cashmere, hand-knitted by the Mano del Uruguay collective.[42] The decoration of the runway show was made by giant shredded paper bales acted as visual metaphor of the "waste" theme.[42]
Hearst sets a goal to use 80% deadstock in 2023 and no use of virgin materials by 2022.[43]
Fusion
editIn November 2022, Hearst participated at the 27th United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties (CoP27) in Sharm El-Sheikh (Egypt) to discuss the critical role fusion power has in the fight against climate change.[44]
Hearst dedicated her Chloé Spring Summer 2023[45] collection to creating awareness around fusion energy,[46] with her team they researched fusion and learnt from engineers, scientists and both the private sector (Commonwealth Fusion System and Helion Energy) and the public sector (Iter and the UK Atomic Energy Authority) to work on the collection.[47]
Vanity Fair documented her visit to the tokamak building at the ITER campus in the South of France with an extensive article titled "How Chloé's Gabriela Hearst Turned Her Climate Obsession Into High Fashion".[48]
In December 2023, Hearst participated in the “An Inclusive Fusion Energy Future” panel, part of the Global Energy Forum, at the 28th United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties (CoP28) in Dubai (UNITED ARAB EMIRATES). At this event hosted by the Atlantic Council, the U.S. officially launched its first international fusion strategy, presented by John Kerry, United States Special Presidential Envoy for Climate.[49]
Notable clients
editHearst's collections have been worn by celebrities, including Gillian Anderson,[50] Laura Dern,[51] Miroslava Duma,[52] Lena Dunham,[53] Dakota Fanning,[54] Selena Gomez,[55] Gugu Mbatha-Raw,[56] Anne Hathaway,[57] Rebecca Hall,[58] Naomi Harris,[59] Lauren Hutton,[60] Gwen Jorgesen,[61] Mindy Kaling,[62] Brie Larson,[63] Demi Moore,[19] Emma Stone,[64] Emma Watson,[65] Allison Williams,[66] Meghan, Duchess of Sussex,[67][68] Catherine, Princess of Wales,[69] Zoe Kravitz,[70] Oprah,[71] Diane Lane,[72] Carey Mulligan,[73] Julia Roberts,[74] Danai Gurira,[75] Patricia Clarkson,[76] Gemma Chan,[77] Hilary Swank,[78] Lady Gaga,[79] Amal Clooney,[80] Amy Adams,[81] Uma Thurman,[82] Christine Baranski,[83] Carolyn Murphy,[83] Rosie Huntington-Whiteley,[84] Vanessa Kirby,[85] Julianna Margulies,[86] Glenn Close,[87] Gabrielle Union,[88] Angelina Jolie,[89] Lorena Ponce De León,[90]Jill Biden[91] and Jodie Comer.[92][93]
Collaborations
editFor the Fall 2016 collection, she partnered with Manos del Uruguay, a nonprofit organization that pays living wages to craftswoman who handmade the tweeds using wool from her farm.[94]
In April 2016, she collaborated with Peter Miles on the design of signature socks used as a parting gift for guests at the annual gala of The Paris Review.[95][96]
In 2017, Hearst collaborated with an Italian mill[13] to produce cloth for fine wool suiting from merino wool from her ranch.[97]
In March 2017, the store Le Bon Marché offered Hearst a space to open her first pop-up shop during Paris Fashion Week.[98]
Following the "no waste" approach of her Fall 2017 collection, Hearst collaborated with Swarovski,[99] who donated stock crystals used on limited-edition starry-night-sky velvet slip dresses in runway looks during New York Fashion Week.[32][33]
For the Met Gala in 2017, Hearst collaborated with Laura Dern on the design of a modern gown with geometric cutouts and a removable polka dot train to honor the Comme des Garçons style.[51]
In August 2019, Gabriela Hearst opens its London store in Mayfair, at 59 Brook Street. The store, designed in collaboration between Gabriela Hearst and architect Lord Norman Foster, represents the brand's commitment to sustainable design, and shares a core design sensibility with the New York flagship store.[100]
In February 2020, Gabriela Hearst announces its partnership with EON, a leading digital identity platform for the fashion and apparel industry, connecting products throughout their lifecycle by unlocking visibility, traceability, and insight through a QR code. The goal is to provide customers with more transparency by sharing the supply chain and giving them access to learn about their garment's journey.[101]
In 2021, for its Spring Summer show, Gabriela Hearst collaborated with the Navajo community bringing the Americas craft together in a collection along the work of Uruguay and Bolivia, through the work of the non- for- profits they work with.[102] She also showcased on the runway, its shoe collaboration with Clergerie, the last remaining shoemaker that still produces its shoes in the French region of Romans sur Isere.[103]
On August 29, 2023, Hearst launched her first fragrance, in collaboration with Fueguia 1833, with two unique scents inspired by the two geographies of her life: Paysandú and New York. The editions of the first batch, I-XXII, are numbered up to 315 of each fragrance.[104]
The Gabriela Hearst Autumn Winter 2023 show was inspired by Irish artist, architect and furniture designer Eileen Gray, who was a pioneer of the modernist movement that began in the 1920s.[105] Gabriela Hearst collaborated with Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura on the set design, inspired by Ricardo Bofill's utopian 'The City in Space’ (La Ciudad en el Espacio), and with Tricker's, one of the longest-established shoemakers in England founded in 1829,[106] on the exclusive development of archival officer boots as well as a new brogue style made exclusively for the collaboration.[107]
For the 2024 Met Gala, Hearst collaborated with Lily Gladstone on the design of a custom black silk wool cady bustier dress and black silk organza cape with hand-embroidered stars handcrafted. from recycled silver and glass beads by Ataumbi Metals, fine jewelry label by Indigenous jeweler and metalsmith artist Keri Ataumbi. Each individual star was hand-crafted from recycled silver and glass beads and hand-embroidered in place to appear as they would be seen in the night sky of the Great Plains on the summer solstice, including the Orion and the Pleiades constellations. The Pleiades, specially requested by Lily Gladstone, was embroidered at the neckline of the cape as a custom closure. A total of 493 stars and glass beads were hand-crafted and hand-embroidered, taking over 120 hours to complete.[108]
Philanthropy
editIn June 2016, she started a collaboration with Tod's to update their classic slip-on sneaker with a men's brogue detail in Morse code that reads "love"[109]—20 percent of proceeds went to Save the Children.[110][111] To promote the project, Gabriela Hearst organized a portrait project featuring Dakota Fanning, Miroslava Duma, Lindsey Adelman, Lauren Hutton, and the Save the Children donor Dorrit Morley and member Zaineb Malick.[110]
In May 2017, Hearst produced a hundred pieces of a limited-edition sweater called Ram Ovaries. The design was a representation of strength symbolized by the use of a woman's reproductive system and ram's horns. The profits from the sales were used to support Planned Parenthood.[112]
In July 2017, upon learning that east Africa was facing its worst drought in 70 years, Hearst visited rural Turkana County, Kenya, with Save the Children president and CEO Carolyn Miles. In October 2017, Hearst partnered with Net-a-Porter and Bergdorf Goodman to raise awareness about the humanitarian crisis by making her handbag collection available to the public for the first time.[113] For one week only, bags were available for direct purchase online and at the Bergdorf Goodman store in New York. Gabriela Hearst pledged a donation of $600,000 to Save the Children to give more than 1,000 families of the Turkana region the ability to buy food, water, and livestock to help them survive the drought.[114]
In September 2018, following several philanthropic campaigns, Hearst started serving on the Save the Children's Board of Trustees.[115][116]
In September 2019, in collaboration with MyTheresa, Hearst launched an 18-piece capsule collection to mark Save the Children centennial year. The collection, with colors inspired by the iconic logo of Save the Children, comprises suits, maxi-length dresses and skirts, knitwear and coats. Twenty percent of the proceeds went to support the organization's Centennial Campaign.[117]
From 2 to 9 December 2019, Hearst donated 100 per cent of her brand's net proceeds to Save the Children to support relief efforts in war-torn Yemen. To support the initiative, Hearst also made her signature bags available for direct purchase online.[118][119]
For the Spring Summer 2020 show, all guests received a scarf featuring a print of animals that've recently gone extinct, also, Hearst made donations in their name to Our Children's Trust, a nonprofit organization in Oregon that has filed lawsuits against governments for infringing on the children's right to a stable climate system.[120]
From June 29 to July 12, 2020, Hearst teamed up with Net-a-Porter for a limited two weeks initiative to support Save the Children global relief efforts in the fight against COVID-19. The collaboration featured Hearst signature bags Baez, Nina and Diana, that were made available in the "Bags of Purpose" sale on Net-a-Porter.[121]
Awards
editYear | Awarding Organization | Category | Result | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Woolmark | Womenswear USA Prize Final | Won | [122] |
2017 | Woolmark | Womenswear International Prize | Won | [123] |
2017 | CFDA | Swarovski Award for Emerging Talent | Nominated | [124] |
2018 | Pratt Institute's | Pratt Fashion Visionary Award | Won | [125] |
2018 | CFDA | Womenswear Designer of the Year | Nominated | [126] |
2020 | CFDA | American Womenswear Designer of the Year | Won | [127] |
2020 | CFDA | American Accessories Designer of the Year | Nominated | [128] |
2020 | The Fashion Awards | Environment | Won | [129] |
2021 | Frank Alvah Parsons Award | Sustainability | Won | [130] |
2021 | FGI Night of Stars | Sustainability | Won | [131] |
2021 | CFDA | Womenswear Designer of the Year | Nominated | [132] |
2021 | CFDA | American Accessories Designer of the Year | Nominated | [132] |
2021 | The Fashion Awards | Leaders of Change Award, Environment | Won | [133] |
2021 | Savvy Awards | Award for Innovation & Creativity | Won | [134] |
2022 | International Center of Photography Infinity Awards | Infinity Trustees Award | Won | [135] |
2022 | CFDA | Womenswear Designer of the Year | Nominated | [136] |
2022 | The Fashion Awards | Leaders of Change Award, Environment | Won | [137] |
2023 | Fashion Institute of Technology | 2023 Couture Council Award For Artistry Of Fashion | Won | [138] |
2024 | Time | 2024 Time Earth Awards | Won | [139] |
Retail
editHearst is sold at more than 50 retailers in several countries, including Forty Five Ten,[7] Le Bon Marchè,[98] The Line,[2] Bergdorf Goodman,[140] Selfridges,[140] Matches Fashion,[141] Boon the Shop,[13] Lane Crawford,[123] and others. In November 2018, Hearst opened its first flagship store, located on Madison Avenue, adjacent to the New York institution that is the Carlyle Hotel. Following Hearst's mission on sustainability, the store was built without synthetics or chemicals, using natural, non-treated reclaimed oak. The lifestyle and fashion magazine Vogue has claimed it as "the most beautiful store in New York City".[142]
Since January 2019, Gabriela Hearst has been working along with Sir Norman Foster to design the first London flagship store, which occupies a corner of a late-19th-century building in Mayfair. As all the aspects of Gabriela Hearst brand, every detail of the boutique has been dictated by sustainability. The custom-built Benchmark furniture has been made in Hungerford from a London plane tree that fell in a recent storm in Lincoln, the floor is reclaimed oak herringbone, the lights are on automatic dimmers, the leather has been dyed using non-toxic vegetable dyes, and the curtains are linen rather than cotton. The feeling of the store is described by Gabriela Hearst as "anti-retail", pervaded by serenity and calmness, avoiding the visual over-hyping.[143]
On November 9, 2023, Hearst opened the first store and flagship on the West Coast on Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Hills,[144] designed by Foster + Partners led by Norman Foster and featuring a bespoke ‘Nomad’ furniture collection by Benji Gavron and Antoine Dumas of Gavron Dumas Studio, with an emphasis on natural materials inspired by Hearst's family ranch in Uruguay.[145]
Personal life
editGabriela Perezutti married John "August" Augustine Hearst in 2013. She currently lives in Manhattan with her husband and their children.[1]
References
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{{cite web}}
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