A true fashion innovator, Cristobal Balenciaga radically altered the fashionable silhouette
of women in the mid-twentieth century. With the methodical skill of an
expert tailor, he created garments of fluidity and grace. Unlike many
couturiers, Balenciaga was able to drape, cut, and fit his own muslin
patterns, known as toiles. He was respected throughout the fashion world
for both his knowledge of technique and construction, and his
unflinching perfectionism.
Balenciaga was born in the small fishing village of Guetaria in the
Basque region of Spain on January 21, 1895. From his early years, he
spent many hours by his mother's side as she worked as a seamstress. In
his teens, the most prominent woman of his town, the Marquesa de Casa
Torres, became his patron and client, sending him to Madrid for formal
training in tailoring and proudly wearing the results. Balenciaga found
early success in his native country. He opened branches of his boutique
Eisa in Madrid, Barcelona, and the fashionable seaside resort of San
Sebastián.
His designs were favored by the Spanish royal family and
fashionable members of the aristocracy. When the Spanish Civil War
forced the closure of his boutiques, Balenciaga moved his operation to
Paris, the acknowledged fashion capital of the world. There the talented
designer joined the ranks of Coco Chanel, Elsa Schiaparelli,
and Mainbocher, among other established couturiers. In August 1937,
Balenciaga staged his first runway show at his Avenue George V atelier,
showing a collection that was heavily influenced by the Spanish
Renaissance.
Balenciaga interpreted numerous historical styles
throughout his career. His "Infanta" gown was inspired by the costumes
of the young Spanish princesses from portraits by Diego Velázquez,
while the short, heavily ornamented "jacket of light" traditionally
worn by toreadors in the bullfighting ring inspired much of his evening
wear.
By 1939, Balenciaga was being praised in the French press as a
revolutionizing force in fashion, with buyers and customers fighting to
gain access to his collection. During World War II, clients risked
travel to Europe for Balenciaga's designs, especially his celebrated
square coat—in which the sleeve was cut in one piece with the yoke—and
anything shown in his unique color combination of black and brown or
black lace over bright pink. In the postwar years, Balenciaga's designs
became streamlined and linear. The clothing he created was different
than the popular, curvy hourglass shape that Christian Dior
promoted with his New Look.
Balenciaga favored fluid lines that allowed
him to alter the way clothing related to a woman's body. Waistlines
were dropped, then raised, independent of the wearer's natural
waistline. In 1953, he introduced the balloon jacket, an elegant sphere
that encased the upper body and provided a pedestal for the wearer's
head. In 1957 came the creation of his high-waisted baby doll dress, the
gracefully draped cocoon coat, and the balloon skirt, shown as a single
pouf or doubled, one pouf on top of the other.
Neither the sack dress,
introduced in 1957, nor the chemise of 1958 had a discernible waist, but
both were considered universally flattering and were copied by a large
number of ready-to-wear manufacturers at every price range. With these
design innovations, Balenciaga achieved what is considered to be his
most important contribution to the world of fashion: a new silhouette
for women.
Throughout the 1960s, Balenciaga continued showing collections of
unparalleled technique and beauty. His innovative use of fabric—he liked
bold materials, heavy cloths, and ornate embroideries—led him to work
with the Swiss fabric house of Abraham. Together they developed silk
gazar, a stiffer version of the pliable fabric that Balenciaga used in
suits, day dresses, and evening wear.
Loyal clients such as the Duchess
of Windsor, Pauline de Rothschild, and Gloria Guinness continued to
appreciate the discreet but important touches he provided in his
clothing: collars that stood away from the collarbone to give a swanlike
appearance and the shortened (seven-eighths-length) bracelet sleeve, so
called because it enabled the wearer to better flaunt her jewelry. When
the Balenciaga salon closed in 1968, the occasion marked the end of the
career of a great artist whose influence is still being felt in the
twenty-first century.
The modern look that he created has been sustained
by André Courrèges and Emanuel Ungaro, who both apprenticed at his
atelier, and by Hubert de Givenchy, among others. Balenciaga died on
March 24, 1972, at home in his beloved Spain. A longtime client offered a
fitting epitaph: "Women did not have to be perfect or even beautiful to
wear his clothes. His clothes made them beautiful."
Further Reading
Jouve, Marie-Andrée. Balenciaga. New York: Universe/Vendome, 1997.
The World of Balenciaga. Exhibition catalogue. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1973.
Pochna, Marie-France. Dior. New York: Universe/Vendome, 1996.
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