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Charles James (designer)

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Nationality
  
British-American

Occupation
  
Fashion designer


Name
  
Charles James

Role
  
Designer

Charles James (designer) Sneak Peek Met Gala39s Featured Designer Charles James


Full Name
  
Charles Wilson Brega James

Born
  
18 July 1906 (
1906-07-18
)
Agincourt House, Camberley, Surrey, United Kingdom

Partner(s)
  
Nancy Lee Gregory (1954-1961)

Children
  
Charles James Jr. and Louise Dominique James

Parent(s)
  
Ralph Ernest Haweis James and Louise Enders Brega

Died
  
September 23, 1978, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada

charles james beyond fashion exhibition at metropolitan museum of art new york by fc


Charles Wilson Brega James (18 July 1906 – 23 September 1978) was a British-born fashion designer known as "America's First Couturier". He is widely considered to have been a master of cutting and is known for his highly structured aesthetic.

Contents

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Early life

Charles James (designer) Charles James the First American Couturier was an Egomaniac

James' father was Ralph Ernest Haweis James, a British army officer and instructor at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. His mother was Louise Enders Brega, a Chicago "patrician". In 1919, he attended Harrow School, where he met Evelyn Waugh, Francis Cyril Rose, and, most importantly, Cecil Beaton, with whom he formed a longstanding friendship. He was expelled from Harrow for a "sexual escapade".

Charles James (designer) Charles James Glam Fashion Dreams

At the age of nineteen in 1926, James opened his first hat shop in Chicago, using the name of a school friend, "Charles Boucheron".

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In 1928, he left Chicago for Long Island with 70 cents, a Pierce Arrow, and a number of hats as his only possessions. He later opened a hat shop above a garage in Murray Hill, Queens, New York, beginning his first dress designs.

Career

Charles James (designer) Charles James Fashion Designer Designers The FMD

From New York James moved to London, setting up shop in Mayfair. He also spent time in Paris in the early 1930s, studying, but was primarily a self-taught designer. In 1934 he designed the dress for Baba (Barbara) Beaton for her wedding to Alec Hambro on November 6, 1934. The young designer created a very modern interpretation of the white wedding dress, with a raised neckline and divided train. Although the bride wanted a quiet wedding, the event was widely reported because of her high-profile social life: the famous photographer Cecil Beaton was her brother.

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James showed one of his most successful collections in Paris in 1947. In the 1950s, he spent most of his time in New York.

Charles James (designer) Charles James at work 2 CHARLES JAMES Pinterest Charles james

According to Harold Koda, The Costume Institute curator in charge, James "transformed fashion design" and his "many advancements included the spiral cut and the taxi dress (created in 1929 and so easy to wear it could be slipped on in the backseat of a taxi)". James also "championed strapless in the Thirties; invented the figure-eight skirt, the puffer jacket and the Pavlovian waistband that expands after a meal, and was an early proponent of licensing". Christian Dior is "said to have credited James with inspiring The New Look".

Charles James (designer) Charles James the First American Couturier was an Egomaniac

James looked upon his dresses as works of art, as did many of his customers. Year after year, he reworked original designs, ignoring the sacrosanct schedule of seasons. The components of the precisely constructed designs were interchangeable, so that James had a never-ending fund of ideas on which to draw. He is most famous for his sculpted ball gowns made of lavish fabrics and to exacting tailoring standards, but is also remembered for his capes and coats, often trimmed with fur and embroidery, and his spiral zipped dresses. He is also famed for a unique, one of a kind white satin quilted jacket made in 1938 and now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, described as the starting point for "anoraks, space man and even fur jackets".

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He designed the interior and several pieces of furniture for the Houston home of John and Dominique de Menil.

Charles James (designer) Butterfly Ball Gown ca 1955 from Charles James Beyond Fashion

After returning to New York City from Paris, Arnold Scaasi worked for James for two years. James retired in 1958. Homer Layne, a graduate student at that time, was "James' assistant for several years until his death in 1978".

Personal life

Charles James (designer) Charles James Beyond Fashion The Metropolitan Museum of Art

In 1954, James married Nancy Lee Gregory, who was well-off, from Kansas, and 20 years his junior. Their marriage dissolved in 1961. They had a son and daughter. After the birth of their son, Charles James Jr. in 1956, he also produced a children's collection. Daughter Louise was born in 1957; she was named for his mother.

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James died at the age of 73 in 1978 of bronchial pneumonia. He died at the Hotel Chelsea, in New York City, where he had three sixth-floor rooms for his work space, office, and apartment.

Legacy

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In 2014, his work was the subject of the opening exhibition of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Anna Wintour Costume Center entitled Charles James: Beyond Fashion. At a preview of the exhibit, Elettra Wiedemann modeled a replica of the Clover Leaf, or "Abstract", ballgown James originally created for Austine Hearst. It was the dress James ranked as the best of his creations. At the preview event, the Costume Institute "detailed the designer's significance today and showed a 1969 video of a James-led retrospective fashion show".

In July 2014, "longtime friend" R. Couri Hay shared "dozens of sketches" by James, along with several stories about the late designer with New York Magazine in the story entitled: "The Secret Life of Fashion Designer Charles James". Four of Hay's drawings were displayed and on loan to the James exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

He is portrayed by Daniel Day-Lewis in the 2017 film Phantom Thread.

References

Charles James (designer) Wikipedia