Fashion

Jean Paul Gaultier: Get to Know the History Behind The Designer

For decades, Jean Paul Gaultier has revolutionized inclusion in fashion. Taking innovation and creativity far beyond his peers, explore how Gaultier changed the fashion landscape.

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At just eighteen years old in 1970, without an ounce of formal training, Jean Paul Gaultier sent out sketches to a number of French designers. Impressed by Gaultier's work, Pierre Cardin hired him as an assistant, giving Gaultier his first introduction to professional training.

In his early years, while living in Paris, he would tiptoe around his grandmother's closet, gaining inspiration from her wardrobe. Awestruck by her corsets in particular, Gaultier set out on his journey toward fashion. He began reading fashion magazines and immersing himself in 1960s fashion culture. By the age of thirteen, he created a collection for his mother and grandmother. With bell bottoms, mini skirts, and other "rebellious" fashions rising in popularity at the time, Gaultier watched fashion shift from the traditional '50s style to one celebrating individuality, liberation, and hippie culture. Designers like Yves Saint Laurent, Emilio Pucci, and Halston embraced and propelled the freedom-infused style. Gaultier cited YSL as one of his primary inspirations during his rise as a designer in the 1970s.  

After a year of working under Cardin, Gaultier took a one-year hiatus to work with Jean Patou. Once returning to Cardin, he was able to identify differences in both designers' work and begin developing an ethos for his own designs. In 1976, he showed his first collection, alongside his romantic and business partner Francis Menuge, in Paris. From his first show on, Gaultier established himself as unconventional, distinctive, and groundbreaking until he was eventually able to launch his own fashion house in 1983. His designs took eccentric to the next level. For years, runways filled with exaggerated bodices, anarchic layering, and exaggerated shaping were the standard for Gaultier. And he never lost sight of his original inspiration: the corset. Many designs incorporated the outdated corset and modernized them. Gaultier redefined the corset as a symbol of female liberation and embracing of femininity.

In 1985, Gaultier debuted his Et Dieu Créa l'Homme (And God Created Man) collection with skirts at the forefront. Male models donned a pant and wrap combo that emulated a skirt in Gaultier's first introduction to blurring gender lines. He rooted this choice in ancient history and the skirt's symbolism of masculinity and power, but in 1985, that meant questioning the current symbolism of skirts. 

 

In the '80s and '90s, the queer community went through a period of extreme heartache as the AIDS epidemic raged on, and queer people were inundated with unrelenting homophobia. In 1990, Gaultier's partner passed away due to AIDS. While this deep loss could have affected his work, Gaultier used his place in the fashion industry to spread awareness. His Spring/Summer 1996 collection featured speckled t-shirts with the words "Safe Sex Forever" printed on the front. "My only regret?" said the designer. "Not having invented the condom: the most beautiful of clothes."

While his advocacy work for LGBTQ+ health only grew over the years, so did his relationship with entertainment icons. In the early '90s, Gaultier designed Madonna's iconic cone bra look as the costume designer for her Blood Ambition Tour and jumpstarted his working relationship with her as a musician. The two are both known for their trailblazing careers. They developed this symbiotic relationship where they could riff off of each other's nonconformist creativity. For Gaultier, the introduction of the cone bra caught the attention of the fashion world. Melding together antique and uber-modern lingerie styles, Gaultier created something entirely novel. 

He continued on to launch into the world of fragrance in 1993 with the debut of his Classique perfume. The scent took over, smelling and embracing the unchaining of women. Inspired by the women in his life, Gaultier made his historic and career-changing move into fragrance and did so with grace. A few years later, he released his next scent, Le Mâle, embodying the sailor that remains ever-present in much of his work. His involvement and impressive success in various areas established his undeniable impact on culture as a whole. 

His growing presence in the fashion world specifically came to a peak with his debut haute couture collection Spring/Summer 1997, when he established his lasting dominance in the industry. Wielding an array of radical cultural themes and avant-garde styling, Gaultier adopted icon status. Famous for his sailor-style striped tops, broad-shouldered outerwear, and thermal and tattoo-inspired prints, as well as his use of religious and astrological influences, Gaultier's haute couture work is not only distinctive but utterly exceptional. 

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Clockwise from top left: Madonna in Jean Paul Gaultier; Madonna in Jean Paul Gaultier; Jean Paul Gaultier Fall/Winter 1984.

After serving as the creative director of Hermès from 2003-2010, Gaultier returned to focus on his own brand. With 50 years in the fashion and fragrance industry, Gaultier stepped down in 2020, leaving the house in the hands of seasonal guest designers, some of whom have included Glenn Martens, Haider Ackermann, and more.

Over the course of his career, Gaultier left an impact on culture as a whole. With a clear vision, he played into eroticism and subversion when designing for Madonna, allowing him to help establish Madonna's image as the epitome of pop. From there, he shifted the trajectory of the popstar image. But his stunningly notable fragrances and his ready-to-wear and haute couture designs gave him a level of prestige that many other designers could never achieve. Although he no longer stands at the helm of his brand, his impact on fashion lives on. In recent years, he has continued to design new items while his vintage designs, particularly his thermal patterns, have resurged in culture. He recently released a new fragrance Le Beau Le Parfum, which features Gaultier's signature body-shaped bottle and sultry scent.

Although his role in fashion and fragrance has lessened in the past few years, his impact and legacy have not faltered, nor has the brand. An icon in radical design, Jean Paul Gaultier will forever be one of fashion's greatest rebels.

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Naomi Campbell in a black Jean Paul Gaultier Haute Couture skirt.
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Clockwise from top left: Jean Paul Gaultier Spring/Summer 1997; Jean Paul Gaultier Spring/Summer 2002; Jean Paul Gaultier Fall/Winter 2021.

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