Trade name |
Gucci |
---|---|
Type | Subsidiary (S.p.A.) |
Industry | Fashion |
Founded | 1921; 102 years ago |
Founder | Guccio Gucci |
Headquarters |
Via Tornabuoni 73/R |
Number of locations |
487 (2019) |
Key people |
Marco Bizzarri (CEO) |
Revenue | €9.62 billion (2019) |
Number of employees |
17,157 (2019) |
Parent | Kering |
Website | gucci.com |
Gucci (, GOO-chee; Italian pronunciation: [ˈɡuttʃi]) is an Italian high-end luxury fashion house based in Florence, Italy.[1][2][3] Its product lines include handbags, ready-to-wear, footwear, accessories, and home decoration; and it licenses its name and branding to Coty, Inc. for fragrance and cosmetics under the name Gucci Beauty.[4]
Gucci was founded in 1921 by Guccio Gucci (1881–1953) in Florence, Tuscany. Under the direction of Aldo Gucci (son of Guccio), Gucci became a worldwide-known brand, an icon of the Italian Dolce Vita. Following family feuds during the 1980s, the Gucci family was entirely ousted from the capital of the company by 1993. After this crisis, the brand was revived with a provocative ‘Porno Chic’ props. In 1999, Gucci was acquired by the French conglomerate Pinault Printemps Redoute, which later became Kering. During the 2010s, Gucci became an iconic ‘geek-chic’ brand.
In 2019, Gucci operated 487 stores for 17,157 employees, and generated €9.628 billion in sales (€8.2 billion in 2018).[5] Marco Bizzarri is CEO of Gucci since December 2014, and Alessandro Michele was creative director from January 2015 to November 23, 2022.[6] Gucci is a subsidiary of the French luxury group Kering.
History
1921 birth in Florence
The Gucci family claims its origins are rooted in the merchant city of Florence since around 1410. Guccio Giovanbattista Giacinto Dario Maria Gucci (1881–1953) left Florence for Paris, and settled in London in 1897 to work at the high-end Savoy Hotel. While working as a bellhop there, he would load/unload the luggage of the hotel’s wealthy clients, learning about their tastes in fashion, quality, fabrics, and traveling conditions. He later worked four years for the Compagnie des Wagons-Lits, the European rail company that specialized in upscale travel leisure, thus further enhancing his experience with luxurious traveling lifestyles. After World War I, he worked for the maker of fine luggage Franzi.[7][8]
In 1921, Guccio Gucci bought his own shop on Via della Vigna Nuova in Florence, Azienda Individuale Guccio Gucci,[9] where he sold imported leather luggage. He also opened a small workshop to have his own leather goods made by local craftsmen. Eventually, a larger workshop had to be acquired to house Gucci’s sixty artisans. In 1935, the invasion of Ethiopia by Mussolini led the League of Nations to impose a trade embargo on Italy. Leather became scarce, pushing Guccio Gucci to introduce other fabrics in the composition of the products, such as raffia, wicker, wood, linen and jute. The rombi motif, a Gucci signature, was created. The Guccis developed a new tanning technique to produce «cuoio grasso«, which became a Gucci trademark. In 1937, Gucci launched its handbags.[8][7]
Guccio’s wife and children all worked in the shop. Aldo, the son of Guccio, became increasingly involved in the family company since he started working there in 1925. He convinced his father to grow by opening a new shop in Rome (21 Via Condotti) in 1938, and launched more Gucci accessories (gloves, belts, wallets, keychains). During World War II, the artisans of Gucci worked on making boots for the Italian infantry.[8][7]
The company made handbags of cotton canvas rather than leather during World War II as a result of material shortages. The canvas, however, was distinguished by a signature double-G symbol combined with prominent red and green bands. After the war, the Gucci crest, which showed a shield and armored knight surrounded by a ribbon inscribed with the family name, became synonymous with the city of Florence.
Post-war Dolce Vita
After the war, Guccio Gucci distributed the shares of the company to his three sons (Aldo, Vasco and Rodolfo). In 1947, Gucci launched the Bamboo bag.[10] The brand launched its first global tagline, Quality is remembered long after price is forgotten. The iconic moccasins (Gucci loafer) were launched in 1952. Guccio Gucci died on 2 January 1953 in Milan. In November 1953, Gucci opened its first US store on 5th Avenue and 58th Street in New York. A second NY shop opened in the Saint Regis Hotel in 1960, and a third on 5th Avenue and 54th Street in 1973, leading the locals to call this NY area «Gucci City».[7]
In 1961, Gucci opened stores in London and Palm Beach, and launched the Jackie Bag. In March 1963, Gucci opened its first French store near Place Vendôme in Paris.[7] The double-G logo for belt buckles and other accessory decorations was introduced in 1964.[11] The Flora scarf was designed in 1966 by Rodolfo Gucci and Vittorio Accornero for Grace Kelly, Princess of Monaco, who became a notable consumer of Gucci products. In October 1968, Gucci opened a store at 347 Rodeo Drive, driving many Hollywood stars to endorse the brand. With the Rodeo Drive opening came the launch of Gucci’s first dresses. Gucci’s breakthrough in the United States led to its global development in Asia (Tokyo opening in 1972, Hong Kong in 1974) and the Middle East.[7] In Brussels, Aldo’s son Roberto piloted the first Gucci franchised store. By 1969, Gucci was managing ten shops in the United States. 84,000 Gucci moccasins were sold in the US alone that year. US President John F. Kennedy called Aldo Gucci the «first Italian ambassador to the United States».[8]
Gucci launched a Rolls-Royce luggage set in 1970[7] and partnered with American Motors Corporation (AMC) to create the Gucci version of the AMC Hornet that was marketed during the 1971, 1972, and 1973 model years. The Gucci Sportabout wagon became one of the first American cars to offer a special luxury trim package created by a famous fashion designer.[12][13][14] Gucci launched Gucci Perfumes (Il Mio Profumo) and its first watch (Model 2000) in 1972, its first franchised store in the US in 1973, and opened the Gucci Galleria in its Beverly Hills store in 1977, a private art gallery adjoined to the store and reserved to premium clients who were given a golden key to access it.[7][8] From 1978 to 1984 a Miami-based coachbuilder marketed a Gucci edition of the Cadillac Seville sedan (the 1978 model is exhibited at the Gucci Museum).[15]
In 1985, the Gucci loafer became part of the permanent collection of the New York Moma.[16]
1980s Gucci’s family feud
In 1969, Giorgio, the son of Aldo, had sparked the first family feud by launching Gucci Boutique on his own, which was finally reabsorbed by the family group in 1972.[8] During the 1980s, the Gucci saga eroded the family-held top management of the company and fed the press headlines. Paolo Gucci, son of Aldo, tried to launch the brand Gucci Plus on his own. Aldo was criticized for developing most of the international business under Gucci America, which he owned. In 1982, to ease tensions in the family, the Gucci group was consolidated and became a publicly-traded company, Guccio Gucci SpA.[17][7] In May 1983, Rodolfo died. His son Maurizio Gucci inherited his father’s majority stake in the company and launched a legal war against his uncle Aldo for full control of Gucci (a prosecution led by the city prosecutor Rudolph Giuliani, and with Domenico de Sole representing the Gucci family).[7] Maurizio Gucci took over the company’s direction. In 1986, Aldo Gucci, 81, with only 16.7% of Gucci left in his possession, was sentenced to a year in prison for tax evasion[18][19] (in a prison where Albert Nipon was also an inmate[7]). The artwork of the Gucci Galleria was liquidated.[7] In 1988, Maurizio Gucci sold almost 47.8% of Gucci to the Bahrain-based investment fund Investcorp (owner of Tiffany since 1984), and withheld the other 50%.[20]
Despite the family disputes, between 1981 and 1987, the sales of trademarked Gucci products reached $400 million,[21] and $227 million in 1990 alone.[22] The 1980s were characterized by a mass-production of Gucci products, which generated revenue but negatively affected Gucci’s position as an exclusive luxury brand. Maurizio Gucci hired Dawn Mello to put Gucci back on tracks.[23][22]
From 1991 to 1993, Gucci’s finances were still in the red. Maurizio Gucci was blamed for spending extravagant amounts of money on the company’s headquarters in Florence (Via delle Caldaie palazzo) and in Milan. Investcorp bought the remaining 50% of Guccio Gucci S.p.A. from Maurizio Gucci in 1993, ending the family involvement in the group.[24] In March 1995, Maurizio Gucci was shot dead in the lobby of Gucci’s Milan office.[25] His ex-wife Patrizia Reggiani served 16 years in jail for hiring the hitman to murder him.[26]
Porno Chic Revival
Dawn Mello[27] was hired in November 1989 as Gucci’s executive vice president and chief designer. She reduced the number of stores from over 1,000 to 180 in a move to rebuild the brand’s exclusivity. She also reduced the number of items sold by Gucci from 22,000 to 7,000. She revived the Bamboo bag and the Gucci loafer. She moved Gucci’s headquarters back from Milan to Florence, where the history of Gucci is deeply rooted.[22]
Dawn Mello hired Tom Ford to oversee the women’s ready-to-wear collection.[24] In 1994, Tom Ford was named creative director of Gucci.[28] Ford and Mello revisited the 1970s archives of the brand. Ford’s 1995 collection, which included the sensual white dresses with provocative cut-outs, became an instant hit.[24] Revived through the hot-bod hedonism of Tom Ford’s creations, Gucci also launched provocative products in limited edition such as silver handcuffs,[29] a G-string[30] and provocative ad campaigns such as the G logo shaved on pubic hair.[31]
Domenico De Sole, legal adviser to the Gucci family since the 1980s and CEO of Gucci since 1994, campaigned for Gucci’s leather manufacturers in Italy to keep working together and developed a partners’ program to strengthen their ties. He reviewed the pricing of each product and gradually raised Gucci’s advertising budget from $6 million in 1993 to $70 million in 1997.[32] In October 1995, the company was publicly indexed on the New York Stock Exchange with an initial stock value set at US$22.[24] Then, from 1995 to 1997, Investcorp sold its interests in Gucci for around US$1.9 billion.[33]
LVMH-PPR struggle over Gucci
By January 1999, the French luxury conglomerate LVMH, which had been buying shares of Gucci discreetly since 1995, reached 34% ownership in Gucci Group NV.[34] Seeking a way out of LVMH’s control, Tom Ford and Domenico De Sole turned to the French financier François Pinault and his group Pinault Printemps Redoute, which later became Kering, for an emergency exit. In March, Pinault’s group bought out 40% of Gucci at $75 a share, and LVMH’s shares decreased to 20.7% in a dilution process. Through the deal, PPR also purchased Yves Saint Laurent from Sanofi and sold it back for the same price to the Gucci Group.[35] This coup d’état in the fashion world launched a cold war between LVMH and the new Gucci-PPR coalition.[36] A tension occurred in December 2000 when Gucci bought 51% of Alexander McQueen’s couture house, as McQueen was also the creative designer of LVMH’s Givenchy at that time.[37] The feud around Gucci ended in September 2001 when all parties reached an agreement.[36] By the end of 2003, Tom Ford and Domenico De Sole made it official that they would not renew their contract with Gucci-PPR that ended in April 2004.[38]
Following Ford’s departure, Gucci Group retained three designers to continue the success of the company’s flagship label: John Ray, Alessandra Facchinetti and Frida Giannini, all of whom had worked under Ford’s creative direction. Facchinetti was elevated to Creative Director of Women’s wear in 2004 and designed for two seasons before leaving the company. Ray served as Creative Director of Menswear for three years. Frida Giannini – a Gucci handbag designer since 2002, head of accessories since 2004, and creative director of women’s ready-to-wear and accessories since 2005 – was appointed creative director of Gucci in 2006.[39] Patrizio di Marco, formerly CEO of Bottega Veneta, was named CEO of Gucci in 2008.[40] Both acclaimed and criticized for perpetually revisiting Tom Ford’s archives, Frida Giannini eventually toned down Ford’s explosive ‘Porno Chic’ props over the years «from sexy to sensual», and started to experiment with ‘androgynous Bohemian’ styles with a 19th-century reminiscence.[41] She also developed «neo-classics» such as the New Bamboo and the New Jackie handbags.[42] Patrizio di Marco focused on the post-2008 crisis with fewer styles and more midrange products.[43] In 2010, Gucci launched a partnership with the auction house Christie’s to develop a wider repository of the brand’s archives and provide an authenticity certification service.[42] In 2011, the company opened the Gucci Museum (Gucci Museo) in Florence to celebrate its 90th anniversary.[44] Between 2010 and 2015, 220 new Gucci stores opened, bringing the total store count to 500.[45]
Postgender geek-chic
Dresses by Alessandro Michele
In December 2014, Marco Bizzarri, former CEO of Bottega Veneta, was named CEO of Gucci.[46] He was tasked to reverse Gucci’s declining sales by giving a new impetus to the brand.[47] In January 2015, Bizzarri appointed Alessandro Michele creative director of Gucci. Alessandro Michele had been working for Gucci since 2002 and served as Frida Giannini’s deputy and head accessories designer. During the Fall show of February 2015, Alessandro Michele introduced «a different Gucci»,[48][49] one with a «sophisticated, intellectual and androgynous feel».[47]
Alessandro Michele launched the Renaissance of Gucci.[50] He revived Gucci classics like the double-G logo,[51] the Jackie O. bag,[52] and created iconic products such as the Dionysus handbag.[53] With a feminized menswear, a strong feminist stance and a ‘geek-chic’ style, Alessandro Michele introduced postgender props for Gucci.[54]
In September 2016, Gucci inaugurated the Gucci Hub, its new Milan headquarters built in the former Caproni aeronautical factory.[55] In July 2017, Gucci announced the launch of Gucci Décor, the first time the brand tested itself in the home decoration segment.[56] In April 2018, Gucci inaugurated the ArtLab, a 37,000-square-metre center of innovation outside of Florence in Italy, where new leather goods, footwear, new materials, metal hardware and packaging are developed and tested.[57] In November 2018, Gucci opened the Gucci Wooster Bookstore in New York, a 2,000-book shop curated by the founder of Dashwood Books David Strettell.[58] In April 2019, the company launched Gucci 9, a 500-employee network of 6 call centers worldwide for high-end customer service.[59] Gucci also revived its makeup collection[60] and launched its first fine jewelry collection.[61]
In 2019, Gucci’s sales reached 9.6 billion euros.[5]
In December 2020, following an agreement between Kering and Alibaba, Gucci launched two stores (fashion and beauty) on Tmall.[62]
In May 2021, Gucci launched a collection of glasses, Hollywood Forever.[63][64]
On November 23, 2022, Alessandro Michele left the post of creative director of Gucci.[65]
Disney Collection
Since 2019, originally in celebration of Mickey Mouse’s 90th birthday, Gucci has held a collection of Disney apparel, including for Lunar New Year.[66]
Corporate structure
Gucci’s holding company Guccio Gucci S.p.A. is based in Florence, Italy, and is a subsidiary of the French luxury group Kering. In 2018, Gucci operated 540 stores for 14,628 employees. The company generated €9.628 billion in revenue (€8.2 billion in 2018), and €3,947 billion in profits (€3.2 billion in 2018).[5]
Governance
In the history of Gucci, up until the end of the Gucci family era, the design, promotion, and production of Gucci products were handled by the members of the Gucci family.[67]
- CEO
- Since 2014: Marco Bizzarri
- 2008–2014: Patrizio di Marco [68]
- 2004–2008: Mark Lee [69]
- 1994–2004: Domenico De Sole
- Creative designers
- Since 2015: Alessandro Michele
- 2006–2015: Frida Giannini
- 1995–2004: Tom Ford
- 1989–1995: Dawn Mello
Initiatives
Culture
In 2011, the company opened the Gucci Museum (Gucci Museo) inside the 14th-century Palazzo della Mercanzia in Florence to celebrate its 90th anniversary.[70][44] In 2016, Alessandro Michele curated two additional rooms dedicated to Tom Ford’s collections.[71] In January 2018, following a renovation, the Gucci Museum reopened with a new name, the Gucci Garden, and a new restaurant within its walls, the Gucci Osteria, managed by Massimo Bottura.[72] The Gucci Osteria was awarded one Michelin star in November 2019.[73] In February 2020, a second Gucci Osteria opened on the rooftop of the Gucci Rodeo Drive store in Los Angeles.[74]
In April 2017, Gucci financed the restoration of the Boboli Gardens at the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.[75] In June 2019, Gucci financed the restoration of the historic Rupe Tarpea and Belvedere Gardens in Rome.[76]
In 2008, Gucci launched the Gucci Tribeca Documentary Fund, an $80,000 fund to finance movies promoting social change and presented at the Tribeca Film Festival.[77] By 2011, the fund grew to $150,000, including $50,000 for a newly created Women Documentary Award.[78] In 2011, with the Venice Film Festival, Gucci also launched the ‘Gucci Award for Women in Cinema’ to underline the impact of women in film-making.[79]
From 2005 to 2015, Gucci donated $20 million to UNICEF’s Schools for Africa program. Once Chime for Change was created, it became the funding vehicle of the Gucci-UNICEF partnership.[80] Chime for Change was founded in February 2013 by Frida Giannini, Salma Hayek and Beyoncé as a global campaign for the improvement of education, health and justice for women worldwide.[81] In June 2013, Chime for Change organized the Sound of Change Live concert which generated $4 million to fund 200 projects in 70 countries.[82] In December 2013, Gucci inked a partnership with Twitter and Women Who Code to create the women-focused hackathon Chime Hack.[83]
Gucci sells a yellow t-shirt that reads «My Body My Choice» and redistributes its proceeds to Chime for Change.[84] In July 2013, activist Lydia Emily was commissioned to paint a mural on Skid Row, Los Angeles of a woman named Jessica, who is a survivor of human trafficking.[85] In January 2019, Chime for Change launched the murals campaign «To Gather Together» promoting gender equality and designed by the artist MP5.[86] In 2020, Gucci launched an «Unconventional Beauty» ad campaign, including a model with Down syndrome.[87]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Gucci pledged €2 million to two crowdfunding campaigns, the first to support the Italian Civil Protection Department, and the second for the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund.[88]
Environment
In 2015, Gucci launched its own environmental profit and loss initiative.[89] In October 2017, Gucci announced it would ban furs from its stores in 2018.[90] In June 2018, the brand launched ‘Equilibrium’, its platform to communicate on its social and environmental efforts and progress.[91] In September 2019, Marco Bizzarri announced Gucci’s intention to go entirely carbon neutral.[92] In 2020, Gucci joined the UNDP-led Lion’s Share Fund to support wildlife conservation.[93]
In popular culture
Eponymous adjective
«Gucci» is often used as an eponymous adjective; for example, «I feel Gucci!» or «that’s so Gucci!» are used to describe feeling luxurious or referencing something as being luxurious.[94][95] The earliest known instance of Gucci used in this sense is Lenny Kravitz describing his bedroom as «very Gucci»[96] in the September 1999 issue of Harper’s Bazaar.[96]
Movies
After initially announcing plans for a movie about the Gucci dynasty in 2007,[97] filmmaker Ridley Scott detailed specifics about his movie in November 2019; titled House of Gucci, the movie would star Lady Gaga as Patrizia Reggiani and Adam Driver as Maurizio Gucci.[98] House of Gucci‘s world premiere took place at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square in London on November 9, 2021.[99] In 2000, Martin Scorsese had also announced plans to make a movie about the Gucci family.[100]
Guinness World Records
- 1974: The Model 2000 Gucci watch broke the record for selling more than one million units in two years.[8]
- 1998: The Gucci «Genius Jeans» set the record as the most expensive pair of jeans. The jeans were distressed, ripped, and covered with African-inspired beads and were priced at US$3,134 in Milan.[101][102]
Counterfeiting
During the 1970s, the explosive popularity of Gucci turned the brand into a prime target of the counterfeiting industry.[7] The Gucci workshops elaborated the brindle pigskin tanning technique that became a Gucci signature, and a tanning process difficult to counterfeit. In 1977 alone, Gucci launched 34 lawsuits for counterfeiting.[8] By the mid-1980s, the brand was involved in «thousands of confiscations and lawsuits all over the world».[103]
In 2013, the UK’s Intellectual Property Office issued a ruling that Gucci had lost the rights to its GG trademark in the UK «to a version of the GG logo in four categories, which encompassed garments such as bracelets, shoulder bags, scarves and coats».[104] However, «according to Gucci, the ruling does not affect the use of its GG logo in the region» because «Gucci is the owner of several other valid registrations for this mark, including a Community Trade Mark (covering the European Union) for its iconic GG logo and those rights are directly enforceable in the U.K.»[104]
In November 2008, the website TheBagAddiction.com was shut down after being sued by Gucci for selling counterfeit products.[105] In 2013, Gucci cracked down on 155 domain names used by counterfeiters to sell fake Gucci products.[106] In 2015, Gucci’s parent company Kering sued the Chinese website Alibaba for listing a lot of «obviously fake Gucci products» on its website.[107] In April 2016, Gucci’s anti-counterfeiting legal actions backfired when the targeted products were the papier-mâché shaped exactly like Gucci products and burned by Chinese people during the ancestral Qingming Jie tradition.[108] In April 2017, Gucci won a lawsuit against 89 Chinese websites selling fake Gucci products.[109] In October 2018, Marco Bizzarri warned the Chinese ecommerce giants Alibaba and JD.com that Gucci could not open shop on their websites as long as they would not remove the many fake Gucci products out of their listings.[110] In December 2019, Gucci sued three dozen websites selling fake Gucci products.[111]
Controversies
In April 2016, the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority banned a Gucci online video ad because it starred an «unhealthily thin» model.[112]
In February 2019, Gucci removed a black balaclava sweater with a rollup collar and a cut-out red-lipped mouth from its shelves after it had been compared to a blackface costume.[113][114] Alessandro Michele responded that his inspiration came from the flamboyant Leigh Bowery but apologized for the way it had been interpreted.[115] To address this issue, Gucci launched the ‘Gucci North America Changemakers Scholarship’ program dedicated to foster diversity within the fashion industry with a $5-million annual fund to support non-profits and community-based programs involved with «the African-American community and communities of color at-large».[116] In May 2019, the Sikhs community in India criticized Gucci’s cultural appropriation of a religious item when the Italian brand commercialized turbans at $800 apiece.[117] In July 2019, Gucci appointed a Global Head of Diversity to address the brand’s latest issues with cultural diversity.[118] In October 2019, Gucci launched a $1.5-million scholarship program for US students traditionally underrepresented in the fashion industry.[119]
In May 2019, Kering agreed to pay a $1.25-billion tax settlement with the Italian fiscal authorities following Gucci’s tax irregularities during the 2011-2017 fiscal periods.[120]
During a September 2019 show that resembled a défilé of mental patients, catwalk model Ayesha Tan Jones held up their hands-on which «mental health is not fashion» was written, a reaction to the brand’s inappropriate commercial use of the imagery of mental illness.[121]
See also
- Made in Italy
Bibliography
- Forden, Sara G. (2001). The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed. Custom House. ISBN 978-0060937751.
- Gucci, Patricia (2016). In the Name of Gucci: A Memoir. Crown Archetype. ISBN 978-0804138932.
- Gucci, Jenny (2008). Gucci Wars: How I Survived Murder and Intrigue at the Heart of the World’s Biggest Fashion House. John Blake. ISBN 978-1844545322.
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- ^ Rachel Sanderson, Gucci appoints Alessandro Michele as new creative director, Ft.com, 21 January 2015
- ^ Mead, Rebecca (11 September 2016). «Gucci’s Renaissance Man». The New Yorker. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Royce-Greensill, Sarah (10 May 2016). «Gucci’s Alessandro Michele and the rebirth of the logo». The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on 10 January 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Emilia Petrarca, Gucci’s Circle of Life, Thecut.com, 20 February 2020
- ^ The Dionysus Bag: An Icon For a New Century, Icon-icon.com, 26 July 2017
- ^ Lisa Armstrong, Whatever Happened To Sex In Fashion? Gucci’s Alessandro Michele On The Rise Of Geek Chic, Viva.co.nz, 22 November 2019
- ^ Zevi, Nathania. «The New Gucci Hub Opens in Milan». Forbes. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Minton, Melissa (12 July 2017). «You Can Now Outfit Your Entire Home in Gucci». Architectural Digest. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ «Gucci Unveils A Centre Of Creativity, Craftsmanship & Sustainability». British Vogue. 19 April 2018. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Emilia Petrarca, Gucci’s Latest Drop? Books!, Thecut.com, 20 November 2018
- ^ «Gucci turns to call centres to lure high-spending millennial shoppers». Financial Times. 20 April 2019. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ «Gucci To Relaunch Make-Up Collection Under The Creative Direction Of Alessandro Michele». British Vogue. 3 May 2019. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Gucci unveils its first fine jewelry collection, Vogue.fr, 5 July 2019
- ^ Suen, Zoe (18 December 2020). «Gucci to Launch on Tmall as Kering and Alibaba Reconcile On Counterfeit Claims». The Business of Fashion. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ «GUCCI EYEWEAR HOLLYWOOD FOREVER — CRASH Magazine». www.crash.fr. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
- ^ «Alessandro Michele steps down as Gucci creative director». www.ctpost.com. 23 November 2022.
- ^ Carreon, June (2 January 2020). «Gucci celebrates Lunar New Year with Mickey Mouse». Elle.
- ^ «Gucci company thrives as a family affair». Christian Science Monitor. 12 June 1984. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
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- ^ «Mark Lee is part of the BoF 500». The Business of Fashion. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
- ^ Menkes, Suzy (27 September 2011). «Gucci Feeds Its Florentine Roots». The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Gucci announces new Tom Ford rooms at the Gucci Museo in Florence, Aeworld.com, 20 June 2016
- ^ Hanbury, Mary. «Gucci just opened a luxurious complex complete with a boutique and a restaurant run by a three-Michelin-starred chef». Business Insider. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Davis, Dominic-Madori. «Gucci is opening a Beverly Hills outpost of its Michelin-starred restaurant in Florence – here’s a look inside». Business Insider. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ Natasha Levy, Gucci Osteria da Massimo Bottura opens in Los Angeles, Deezen.com, 26 February 2020
- ^ Caroline Elbaor, Gucci Will Foot the Bill for the Restoration of Uffizi Gallery’s Boboli Gardens, Artnet.com, 7 April 2017
- ^ «Italy – Gucci and Rome City Council collaborate to restore historic RupeTarpea and Belvedere Gardens». The Luxury Chronicle. 7 June 2019. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Peter B. Kaufman, Jen Mohan, The Economics of Independent Film and Video Distribution in the Digital Age, Intelligenttelevision.com, 4 August 2008
- ^ «Gucci, PPR, Tribeca create doc award». Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ Pat Eggleton, New Gucci award for women in cinema, Italymagazine.com, 6 September 2010
- ^ Gucci-UNICEF partnership turns 10: Over 7.5 million children reap rewards, Unicef.org, 2 June 2015
- ^ Sarah Karmali, Beyoncé Leads New Gucci Empowerment Campaign, Vogue.com, 28 February 2013
- ^ «Chime for Change: Women’s voices, loud and clear: A star-studded». The Independent. 2 June 2013. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ «Gucci Partners with Twitter and Women Who Code to Host #Chimehack, Creating Innovative Mobile App Solutions To Support Girls And Women». UNICEF USA. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ Keziah Weir, LGBTQ+ Activist Adam Eli on His Work With Gucci’s Chime for Change Initiative, Vanityfair.com, 10 October 2019
- ^ «Lydia Emily Paints for Chime For Change». Archived from the original on 7 September 2014. Retrieved 26 July 2013.
- ^ Gucci unveils chime for change campaign that fights for gender equality, Designboom.com, 31 January 2019
- ^ «Teen model with Down syndrome featured in new Gucci ad campaign». Today.com. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
- ^ Chrisanthi Kaliviotis, «We are all in this together». Gucci pledges €2 million to two crowdfunding campaigns to fight Covid-19, Graziamagazine.com, 26 March 2020
- ^ Conlon, Scarlett (12 September 2019). «Gucci goes carbon neutral in attempt to tackle climate crisis». The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ David Reed, «Gucci boss says fashion label will be fur-free by 2018 Archived 14 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine,» CNBC, 12 October 2017.
- ^ Alice Newbold, Gucci Furthers Its Commitment To Sustainability With Gucci Equilibrium, Vogue.co.uk, 5 June 2018
- ^ Scarlett Conlon, Gucci goes carbon neutral in attempt to tackle climate crisis, Theguardian.com, 12 September 2019
- ^ Gucci joins The Lion’s Share Fund to support wildlife conservation, Un.org, 13 February 2020
- ^ Friedman, Vanessa (22 February 2018). «At Gucci, Dressing for the Post-Human World». The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Borge, Jonathan (12 April 2019). «40 Popular Slang Words, Explained». Oprah Magazine. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ a b «Gucci». wmerriam-webster.com. Archived from the original on 6 March 2019. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ Peter Popham, Cut! Hollywood turns Gucci family saga into an epic drama, Independent.co.uk, 7 December 2007
- ^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (1 November 2019). «Lady Gaga, Ridley & Giannina Scott Team On Film About Assassination Of Gucci Grandson Maurizio; Gaga To Play Convicted Ex-Wife Patrizia Reggiani». Deadline. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Krol, Charlotte (21 August 2020). «Lady Gaga’s ‘Gucci’ movie rounds out stellar cast with Adam Driver, Robert De Niro and more». NME. Archived from the original on 5 February 2021. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
- ^ Hallie Levine, Inside the deadly Gucci family feud: Book reveals why designing woman plotted ex’s murder, Nypost.com, 13 September 2000
- ^ Yara, Susan (30 November 2005). «The Most Expensive Jeans». Forbes. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
- ^ This record was surpassed in June 2005 by Levi Strauss & Co.’s 115-year-old 501 jeans that sold to an anonymous Japanese collector for $60,000.
- ^ Jane Anderson, Gucci company thrives as a family affair, Csmonitor.com, 12 June 1984
- ^ a b Jones, Nina (20 November 2013). «Gucci in Trademark Tussle in U.K.» WWD. Archived from the original on 8 January 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
- ^ Rebecca R. Younger, Gucci America, Inc. v. Frontline Processing Corp.: 721 F. Supp. 2D 228 (S.D.N.Y. 2010), Depaul.edu, 2011
- ^ Young, Vicki M. (17 October 2013). «Gucci Awarded $144.2M Against Online Counterfeiters». WWD. Archived from the original on 20 October 2013. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
- ^ «Gucci sues Alibaba over ‘counterfeit goods». BBC. 18 May 2015. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
- ^ Bain, Marc (29 April 2016). «Gucci is taking its fight against counterfeiting to the next frontier: the afterlife». Quartz. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ Esposito, Cecilia (20 April 2017). «Gucci won $9 million in a lawsuit for counterfeiting». NSS magazine. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
- ^ Tom Hancock, Gucci wary of Chinese ecommerce tie-up because of fakes, Ft.com, 15 October 2018
- ^ Sundar, Sindhu (6 December 2019). «Gucci Goes After Alleged Counterfeiters in New Suit». WWD. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ Sweney, Mark (6 April 2016). «Gucci ad banned over ‘unhealthily thin’ model». The Guardian. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
- ^ Whitney Bauck, Gucci apologizes for controversial ‘blackface’ sweater, Fashionista.com, 7 February 2019
- ^ Holcombe, Madeline (7 February 2019). «Gucci apologizes after social media users say sweater resembles blackface». CNN. Archived from the original on 8 February 2019. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
- ^ Sarah Young, Gucci’s blackface scandal: Creative director breaks silence over controversial jumper, Independent.co.uk, 13 February 2019
- ^ Sandra Song, Gucci Launches Changemakers Program to Further Diversity, Papermag.com, 19 March 2019
- ^ Kimberly Yam, Sikhs Speak Out Against Gucci’s $800 Turban, Huffpost.com, 16 May 2019
- ^ Ellie Violet Bramley, Gucci hires diversity chief after criticism over insensitive designs, Theguardian.com, 30 July 2019
- ^ «Gucci launches diversity US scholarship program». AP NEWS. 7 October 2019. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ Parodi, Emilio; White, Sarah (9 May 2019). «Gucci owner Kering agrees record Italian tax settlement». Reuters.com. Archived from the original on 7 September 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
- ^ Mallenbaum, Carly. «Model protests Gucci runway that featured straitjackets: ‘Mental health is not fashion’«. USA Today. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gucci.
- Official website
Trade name |
Gucci |
---|---|
Type | Subsidiary (S.p.A.) |
Industry | Fashion |
Founded | 1921; 102 years ago |
Founder | Guccio Gucci |
Headquarters |
Via Tornabuoni 73/R |
Number of locations |
487 (2019) |
Key people |
Marco Bizzarri (CEO) |
Revenue | €9.62 billion (2019) |
Number of employees |
17,157 (2019) |
Parent | Kering |
Website | gucci.com |
Gucci (, GOO-chee; Italian pronunciation: [ˈɡuttʃi]) is an Italian high-end luxury fashion house based in Florence, Italy.[1][2][3] Its product lines include handbags, ready-to-wear, footwear, accessories, and home decoration; and it licenses its name and branding to Coty, Inc. for fragrance and cosmetics under the name Gucci Beauty.[4]
Gucci was founded in 1921 by Guccio Gucci (1881–1953) in Florence, Tuscany. Under the direction of Aldo Gucci (son of Guccio), Gucci became a worldwide-known brand, an icon of the Italian Dolce Vita. Following family feuds during the 1980s, the Gucci family was entirely ousted from the capital of the company by 1993. After this crisis, the brand was revived with a provocative ‘Porno Chic’ props. In 1999, Gucci was acquired by the French conglomerate Pinault Printemps Redoute, which later became Kering. During the 2010s, Gucci became an iconic ‘geek-chic’ brand.
In 2019, Gucci operated 487 stores for 17,157 employees, and generated €9.628 billion in sales (€8.2 billion in 2018).[5] Marco Bizzarri is CEO of Gucci since December 2014, and Alessandro Michele was creative director from January 2015 to November 23, 2022.[6] Gucci is a subsidiary of the French luxury group Kering.
History
1921 birth in Florence
The Gucci family claims its origins are rooted in the merchant city of Florence since around 1410. Guccio Giovanbattista Giacinto Dario Maria Gucci (1881–1953) left Florence for Paris, and settled in London in 1897 to work at the high-end Savoy Hotel. While working as a bellhop there, he would load/unload the luggage of the hotel’s wealthy clients, learning about their tastes in fashion, quality, fabrics, and traveling conditions. He later worked four years for the Compagnie des Wagons-Lits, the European rail company that specialized in upscale travel leisure, thus further enhancing his experience with luxurious traveling lifestyles. After World War I, he worked for the maker of fine luggage Franzi.[7][8]
In 1921, Guccio Gucci bought his own shop on Via della Vigna Nuova in Florence, Azienda Individuale Guccio Gucci,[9] where he sold imported leather luggage. He also opened a small workshop to have his own leather goods made by local craftsmen. Eventually, a larger workshop had to be acquired to house Gucci’s sixty artisans. In 1935, the invasion of Ethiopia by Mussolini led the League of Nations to impose a trade embargo on Italy. Leather became scarce, pushing Guccio Gucci to introduce other fabrics in the composition of the products, such as raffia, wicker, wood, linen and jute. The rombi motif, a Gucci signature, was created. The Guccis developed a new tanning technique to produce «cuoio grasso«, which became a Gucci trademark. In 1937, Gucci launched its handbags.[8][7]
Guccio’s wife and children all worked in the shop. Aldo, the son of Guccio, became increasingly involved in the family company since he started working there in 1925. He convinced his father to grow by opening a new shop in Rome (21 Via Condotti) in 1938, and launched more Gucci accessories (gloves, belts, wallets, keychains). During World War II, the artisans of Gucci worked on making boots for the Italian infantry.[8][7]
The company made handbags of cotton canvas rather than leather during World War II as a result of material shortages. The canvas, however, was distinguished by a signature double-G symbol combined with prominent red and green bands. After the war, the Gucci crest, which showed a shield and armored knight surrounded by a ribbon inscribed with the family name, became synonymous with the city of Florence.
Post-war Dolce Vita
After the war, Guccio Gucci distributed the shares of the company to his three sons (Aldo, Vasco and Rodolfo). In 1947, Gucci launched the Bamboo bag.[10] The brand launched its first global tagline, Quality is remembered long after price is forgotten. The iconic moccasins (Gucci loafer) were launched in 1952. Guccio Gucci died on 2 January 1953 in Milan. In November 1953, Gucci opened its first US store on 5th Avenue and 58th Street in New York. A second NY shop opened in the Saint Regis Hotel in 1960, and a third on 5th Avenue and 54th Street in 1973, leading the locals to call this NY area «Gucci City».[7]
In 1961, Gucci opened stores in London and Palm Beach, and launched the Jackie Bag. In March 1963, Gucci opened its first French store near Place Vendôme in Paris.[7] The double-G logo for belt buckles and other accessory decorations was introduced in 1964.[11] The Flora scarf was designed in 1966 by Rodolfo Gucci and Vittorio Accornero for Grace Kelly, Princess of Monaco, who became a notable consumer of Gucci products. In October 1968, Gucci opened a store at 347 Rodeo Drive, driving many Hollywood stars to endorse the brand. With the Rodeo Drive opening came the launch of Gucci’s first dresses. Gucci’s breakthrough in the United States led to its global development in Asia (Tokyo opening in 1972, Hong Kong in 1974) and the Middle East.[7] In Brussels, Aldo’s son Roberto piloted the first Gucci franchised store. By 1969, Gucci was managing ten shops in the United States. 84,000 Gucci moccasins were sold in the US alone that year. US President John F. Kennedy called Aldo Gucci the «first Italian ambassador to the United States».[8]
Gucci launched a Rolls-Royce luggage set in 1970[7] and partnered with American Motors Corporation (AMC) to create the Gucci version of the AMC Hornet that was marketed during the 1971, 1972, and 1973 model years. The Gucci Sportabout wagon became one of the first American cars to offer a special luxury trim package created by a famous fashion designer.[12][13][14] Gucci launched Gucci Perfumes (Il Mio Profumo) and its first watch (Model 2000) in 1972, its first franchised store in the US in 1973, and opened the Gucci Galleria in its Beverly Hills store in 1977, a private art gallery adjoined to the store and reserved to premium clients who were given a golden key to access it.[7][8] From 1978 to 1984 a Miami-based coachbuilder marketed a Gucci edition of the Cadillac Seville sedan (the 1978 model is exhibited at the Gucci Museum).[15]
In 1985, the Gucci loafer became part of the permanent collection of the New York Moma.[16]
1980s Gucci’s family feud
In 1969, Giorgio, the son of Aldo, had sparked the first family feud by launching Gucci Boutique on his own, which was finally reabsorbed by the family group in 1972.[8] During the 1980s, the Gucci saga eroded the family-held top management of the company and fed the press headlines. Paolo Gucci, son of Aldo, tried to launch the brand Gucci Plus on his own. Aldo was criticized for developing most of the international business under Gucci America, which he owned. In 1982, to ease tensions in the family, the Gucci group was consolidated and became a publicly-traded company, Guccio Gucci SpA.[17][7] In May 1983, Rodolfo died. His son Maurizio Gucci inherited his father’s majority stake in the company and launched a legal war against his uncle Aldo for full control of Gucci (a prosecution led by the city prosecutor Rudolph Giuliani, and with Domenico de Sole representing the Gucci family).[7] Maurizio Gucci took over the company’s direction. In 1986, Aldo Gucci, 81, with only 16.7% of Gucci left in his possession, was sentenced to a year in prison for tax evasion[18][19] (in a prison where Albert Nipon was also an inmate[7]). The artwork of the Gucci Galleria was liquidated.[7] In 1988, Maurizio Gucci sold almost 47.8% of Gucci to the Bahrain-based investment fund Investcorp (owner of Tiffany since 1984), and withheld the other 50%.[20]
Despite the family disputes, between 1981 and 1987, the sales of trademarked Gucci products reached $400 million,[21] and $227 million in 1990 alone.[22] The 1980s were characterized by a mass-production of Gucci products, which generated revenue but negatively affected Gucci’s position as an exclusive luxury brand. Maurizio Gucci hired Dawn Mello to put Gucci back on tracks.[23][22]
From 1991 to 1993, Gucci’s finances were still in the red. Maurizio Gucci was blamed for spending extravagant amounts of money on the company’s headquarters in Florence (Via delle Caldaie palazzo) and in Milan. Investcorp bought the remaining 50% of Guccio Gucci S.p.A. from Maurizio Gucci in 1993, ending the family involvement in the group.[24] In March 1995, Maurizio Gucci was shot dead in the lobby of Gucci’s Milan office.[25] His ex-wife Patrizia Reggiani served 16 years in jail for hiring the hitman to murder him.[26]
Porno Chic Revival
Dawn Mello[27] was hired in November 1989 as Gucci’s executive vice president and chief designer. She reduced the number of stores from over 1,000 to 180 in a move to rebuild the brand’s exclusivity. She also reduced the number of items sold by Gucci from 22,000 to 7,000. She revived the Bamboo bag and the Gucci loafer. She moved Gucci’s headquarters back from Milan to Florence, where the history of Gucci is deeply rooted.[22]
Dawn Mello hired Tom Ford to oversee the women’s ready-to-wear collection.[24] In 1994, Tom Ford was named creative director of Gucci.[28] Ford and Mello revisited the 1970s archives of the brand. Ford’s 1995 collection, which included the sensual white dresses with provocative cut-outs, became an instant hit.[24] Revived through the hot-bod hedonism of Tom Ford’s creations, Gucci also launched provocative products in limited edition such as silver handcuffs,[29] a G-string[30] and provocative ad campaigns such as the G logo shaved on pubic hair.[31]
Domenico De Sole, legal adviser to the Gucci family since the 1980s and CEO of Gucci since 1994, campaigned for Gucci’s leather manufacturers in Italy to keep working together and developed a partners’ program to strengthen their ties. He reviewed the pricing of each product and gradually raised Gucci’s advertising budget from $6 million in 1993 to $70 million in 1997.[32] In October 1995, the company was publicly indexed on the New York Stock Exchange with an initial stock value set at US$22.[24] Then, from 1995 to 1997, Investcorp sold its interests in Gucci for around US$1.9 billion.[33]
LVMH-PPR struggle over Gucci
By January 1999, the French luxury conglomerate LVMH, which had been buying shares of Gucci discreetly since 1995, reached 34% ownership in Gucci Group NV.[34] Seeking a way out of LVMH’s control, Tom Ford and Domenico De Sole turned to the French financier François Pinault and his group Pinault Printemps Redoute, which later became Kering, for an emergency exit. In March, Pinault’s group bought out 40% of Gucci at $75 a share, and LVMH’s shares decreased to 20.7% in a dilution process. Through the deal, PPR also purchased Yves Saint Laurent from Sanofi and sold it back for the same price to the Gucci Group.[35] This coup d’état in the fashion world launched a cold war between LVMH and the new Gucci-PPR coalition.[36] A tension occurred in December 2000 when Gucci bought 51% of Alexander McQueen’s couture house, as McQueen was also the creative designer of LVMH’s Givenchy at that time.[37] The feud around Gucci ended in September 2001 when all parties reached an agreement.[36] By the end of 2003, Tom Ford and Domenico De Sole made it official that they would not renew their contract with Gucci-PPR that ended in April 2004.[38]
Following Ford’s departure, Gucci Group retained three designers to continue the success of the company’s flagship label: John Ray, Alessandra Facchinetti and Frida Giannini, all of whom had worked under Ford’s creative direction. Facchinetti was elevated to Creative Director of Women’s wear in 2004 and designed for two seasons before leaving the company. Ray served as Creative Director of Menswear for three years. Frida Giannini – a Gucci handbag designer since 2002, head of accessories since 2004, and creative director of women’s ready-to-wear and accessories since 2005 – was appointed creative director of Gucci in 2006.[39] Patrizio di Marco, formerly CEO of Bottega Veneta, was named CEO of Gucci in 2008.[40] Both acclaimed and criticized for perpetually revisiting Tom Ford’s archives, Frida Giannini eventually toned down Ford’s explosive ‘Porno Chic’ props over the years «from sexy to sensual», and started to experiment with ‘androgynous Bohemian’ styles with a 19th-century reminiscence.[41] She also developed «neo-classics» such as the New Bamboo and the New Jackie handbags.[42] Patrizio di Marco focused on the post-2008 crisis with fewer styles and more midrange products.[43] In 2010, Gucci launched a partnership with the auction house Christie’s to develop a wider repository of the brand’s archives and provide an authenticity certification service.[42] In 2011, the company opened the Gucci Museum (Gucci Museo) in Florence to celebrate its 90th anniversary.[44] Between 2010 and 2015, 220 new Gucci stores opened, bringing the total store count to 500.[45]
Postgender geek-chic
Dresses by Alessandro Michele
In December 2014, Marco Bizzarri, former CEO of Bottega Veneta, was named CEO of Gucci.[46] He was tasked to reverse Gucci’s declining sales by giving a new impetus to the brand.[47] In January 2015, Bizzarri appointed Alessandro Michele creative director of Gucci. Alessandro Michele had been working for Gucci since 2002 and served as Frida Giannini’s deputy and head accessories designer. During the Fall show of February 2015, Alessandro Michele introduced «a different Gucci»,[48][49] one with a «sophisticated, intellectual and androgynous feel».[47]
Alessandro Michele launched the Renaissance of Gucci.[50] He revived Gucci classics like the double-G logo,[51] the Jackie O. bag,[52] and created iconic products such as the Dionysus handbag.[53] With a feminized menswear, a strong feminist stance and a ‘geek-chic’ style, Alessandro Michele introduced postgender props for Gucci.[54]
In September 2016, Gucci inaugurated the Gucci Hub, its new Milan headquarters built in the former Caproni aeronautical factory.[55] In July 2017, Gucci announced the launch of Gucci Décor, the first time the brand tested itself in the home decoration segment.[56] In April 2018, Gucci inaugurated the ArtLab, a 37,000-square-metre center of innovation outside of Florence in Italy, where new leather goods, footwear, new materials, metal hardware and packaging are developed and tested.[57] In November 2018, Gucci opened the Gucci Wooster Bookstore in New York, a 2,000-book shop curated by the founder of Dashwood Books David Strettell.[58] In April 2019, the company launched Gucci 9, a 500-employee network of 6 call centers worldwide for high-end customer service.[59] Gucci also revived its makeup collection[60] and launched its first fine jewelry collection.[61]
In 2019, Gucci’s sales reached 9.6 billion euros.[5]
In December 2020, following an agreement between Kering and Alibaba, Gucci launched two stores (fashion and beauty) on Tmall.[62]
In May 2021, Gucci launched a collection of glasses, Hollywood Forever.[63][64]
On November 23, 2022, Alessandro Michele left the post of creative director of Gucci.[65]
Disney Collection
Since 2019, originally in celebration of Mickey Mouse’s 90th birthday, Gucci has held a collection of Disney apparel, including for Lunar New Year.[66]
Corporate structure
Gucci’s holding company Guccio Gucci S.p.A. is based in Florence, Italy, and is a subsidiary of the French luxury group Kering. In 2018, Gucci operated 540 stores for 14,628 employees. The company generated €9.628 billion in revenue (€8.2 billion in 2018), and €3,947 billion in profits (€3.2 billion in 2018).[5]
Governance
In the history of Gucci, up until the end of the Gucci family era, the design, promotion, and production of Gucci products were handled by the members of the Gucci family.[67]
- CEO
- Since 2014: Marco Bizzarri
- 2008–2014: Patrizio di Marco [68]
- 2004–2008: Mark Lee [69]
- 1994–2004: Domenico De Sole
- Creative designers
- Since 2015: Alessandro Michele
- 2006–2015: Frida Giannini
- 1995–2004: Tom Ford
- 1989–1995: Dawn Mello
Initiatives
Culture
In 2011, the company opened the Gucci Museum (Gucci Museo) inside the 14th-century Palazzo della Mercanzia in Florence to celebrate its 90th anniversary.[70][44] In 2016, Alessandro Michele curated two additional rooms dedicated to Tom Ford’s collections.[71] In January 2018, following a renovation, the Gucci Museum reopened with a new name, the Gucci Garden, and a new restaurant within its walls, the Gucci Osteria, managed by Massimo Bottura.[72] The Gucci Osteria was awarded one Michelin star in November 2019.[73] In February 2020, a second Gucci Osteria opened on the rooftop of the Gucci Rodeo Drive store in Los Angeles.[74]
In April 2017, Gucci financed the restoration of the Boboli Gardens at the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.[75] In June 2019, Gucci financed the restoration of the historic Rupe Tarpea and Belvedere Gardens in Rome.[76]
In 2008, Gucci launched the Gucci Tribeca Documentary Fund, an $80,000 fund to finance movies promoting social change and presented at the Tribeca Film Festival.[77] By 2011, the fund grew to $150,000, including $50,000 for a newly created Women Documentary Award.[78] In 2011, with the Venice Film Festival, Gucci also launched the ‘Gucci Award for Women in Cinema’ to underline the impact of women in film-making.[79]
From 2005 to 2015, Gucci donated $20 million to UNICEF’s Schools for Africa program. Once Chime for Change was created, it became the funding vehicle of the Gucci-UNICEF partnership.[80] Chime for Change was founded in February 2013 by Frida Giannini, Salma Hayek and Beyoncé as a global campaign for the improvement of education, health and justice for women worldwide.[81] In June 2013, Chime for Change organized the Sound of Change Live concert which generated $4 million to fund 200 projects in 70 countries.[82] In December 2013, Gucci inked a partnership with Twitter and Women Who Code to create the women-focused hackathon Chime Hack.[83]
Gucci sells a yellow t-shirt that reads «My Body My Choice» and redistributes its proceeds to Chime for Change.[84] In July 2013, activist Lydia Emily was commissioned to paint a mural on Skid Row, Los Angeles of a woman named Jessica, who is a survivor of human trafficking.[85] In January 2019, Chime for Change launched the murals campaign «To Gather Together» promoting gender equality and designed by the artist MP5.[86] In 2020, Gucci launched an «Unconventional Beauty» ad campaign, including a model with Down syndrome.[87]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Gucci pledged €2 million to two crowdfunding campaigns, the first to support the Italian Civil Protection Department, and the second for the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund.[88]
Environment
In 2015, Gucci launched its own environmental profit and loss initiative.[89] In October 2017, Gucci announced it would ban furs from its stores in 2018.[90] In June 2018, the brand launched ‘Equilibrium’, its platform to communicate on its social and environmental efforts and progress.[91] In September 2019, Marco Bizzarri announced Gucci’s intention to go entirely carbon neutral.[92] In 2020, Gucci joined the UNDP-led Lion’s Share Fund to support wildlife conservation.[93]
In popular culture
Eponymous adjective
«Gucci» is often used as an eponymous adjective; for example, «I feel Gucci!» or «that’s so Gucci!» are used to describe feeling luxurious or referencing something as being luxurious.[94][95] The earliest known instance of Gucci used in this sense is Lenny Kravitz describing his bedroom as «very Gucci»[96] in the September 1999 issue of Harper’s Bazaar.[96]
Movies
After initially announcing plans for a movie about the Gucci dynasty in 2007,[97] filmmaker Ridley Scott detailed specifics about his movie in November 2019; titled House of Gucci, the movie would star Lady Gaga as Patrizia Reggiani and Adam Driver as Maurizio Gucci.[98] House of Gucci‘s world premiere took place at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square in London on November 9, 2021.[99] In 2000, Martin Scorsese had also announced plans to make a movie about the Gucci family.[100]
Guinness World Records
- 1974: The Model 2000 Gucci watch broke the record for selling more than one million units in two years.[8]
- 1998: The Gucci «Genius Jeans» set the record as the most expensive pair of jeans. The jeans were distressed, ripped, and covered with African-inspired beads and were priced at US$3,134 in Milan.[101][102]
Counterfeiting
During the 1970s, the explosive popularity of Gucci turned the brand into a prime target of the counterfeiting industry.[7] The Gucci workshops elaborated the brindle pigskin tanning technique that became a Gucci signature, and a tanning process difficult to counterfeit. In 1977 alone, Gucci launched 34 lawsuits for counterfeiting.[8] By the mid-1980s, the brand was involved in «thousands of confiscations and lawsuits all over the world».[103]
In 2013, the UK’s Intellectual Property Office issued a ruling that Gucci had lost the rights to its GG trademark in the UK «to a version of the GG logo in four categories, which encompassed garments such as bracelets, shoulder bags, scarves and coats».[104] However, «according to Gucci, the ruling does not affect the use of its GG logo in the region» because «Gucci is the owner of several other valid registrations for this mark, including a Community Trade Mark (covering the European Union) for its iconic GG logo and those rights are directly enforceable in the U.K.»[104]
In November 2008, the website TheBagAddiction.com was shut down after being sued by Gucci for selling counterfeit products.[105] In 2013, Gucci cracked down on 155 domain names used by counterfeiters to sell fake Gucci products.[106] In 2015, Gucci’s parent company Kering sued the Chinese website Alibaba for listing a lot of «obviously fake Gucci products» on its website.[107] In April 2016, Gucci’s anti-counterfeiting legal actions backfired when the targeted products were the papier-mâché shaped exactly like Gucci products and burned by Chinese people during the ancestral Qingming Jie tradition.[108] In April 2017, Gucci won a lawsuit against 89 Chinese websites selling fake Gucci products.[109] In October 2018, Marco Bizzarri warned the Chinese ecommerce giants Alibaba and JD.com that Gucci could not open shop on their websites as long as they would not remove the many fake Gucci products out of their listings.[110] In December 2019, Gucci sued three dozen websites selling fake Gucci products.[111]
Controversies
In April 2016, the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority banned a Gucci online video ad because it starred an «unhealthily thin» model.[112]
In February 2019, Gucci removed a black balaclava sweater with a rollup collar and a cut-out red-lipped mouth from its shelves after it had been compared to a blackface costume.[113][114] Alessandro Michele responded that his inspiration came from the flamboyant Leigh Bowery but apologized for the way it had been interpreted.[115] To address this issue, Gucci launched the ‘Gucci North America Changemakers Scholarship’ program dedicated to foster diversity within the fashion industry with a $5-million annual fund to support non-profits and community-based programs involved with «the African-American community and communities of color at-large».[116] In May 2019, the Sikhs community in India criticized Gucci’s cultural appropriation of a religious item when the Italian brand commercialized turbans at $800 apiece.[117] In July 2019, Gucci appointed a Global Head of Diversity to address the brand’s latest issues with cultural diversity.[118] In October 2019, Gucci launched a $1.5-million scholarship program for US students traditionally underrepresented in the fashion industry.[119]
In May 2019, Kering agreed to pay a $1.25-billion tax settlement with the Italian fiscal authorities following Gucci’s tax irregularities during the 2011-2017 fiscal periods.[120]
During a September 2019 show that resembled a défilé of mental patients, catwalk model Ayesha Tan Jones held up their hands-on which «mental health is not fashion» was written, a reaction to the brand’s inappropriate commercial use of the imagery of mental illness.[121]
See also
- Made in Italy
Bibliography
- Forden, Sara G. (2001). The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed. Custom House. ISBN 978-0060937751.
- Gucci, Patricia (2016). In the Name of Gucci: A Memoir. Crown Archetype. ISBN 978-0804138932.
- Gucci, Jenny (2008). Gucci Wars: How I Survived Murder and Intrigue at the Heart of the World’s Biggest Fashion House. John Blake. ISBN 978-1844545322.
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{{cite web}}
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gucci.
- Official website
Trade name |
Gucci |
---|---|
Type | Subsidiary (S.p.A.) |
Industry | Fashion |
Founded | 1921; 102 years ago |
Founder | Guccio Gucci |
Headquarters |
Via Tornabuoni 73/R |
Number of locations |
487 (2019) |
Key people |
Marco Bizzarri (CEO) |
Revenue | €9.62 billion (2019) |
Number of employees |
17,157 (2019) |
Parent | Kering |
Website | gucci.com |
Gucci (, GOO-chee; Italian pronunciation: [ˈɡuttʃi]) is an Italian high-end luxury fashion house based in Florence, Italy.[1][2][3] Its product lines include handbags, ready-to-wear, footwear, accessories, and home decoration; and it licenses its name and branding to Coty, Inc. for fragrance and cosmetics under the name Gucci Beauty.[4]
Gucci was founded in 1921 by Guccio Gucci (1881–1953) in Florence, Tuscany. Under the direction of Aldo Gucci (son of Guccio), Gucci became a worldwide-known brand, an icon of the Italian Dolce Vita. Following family feuds during the 1980s, the Gucci family was entirely ousted from the capital of the company by 1993. After this crisis, the brand was revived with a provocative ‘Porno Chic’ props. In 1999, Gucci was acquired by the French conglomerate Pinault Printemps Redoute, which later became Kering. During the 2010s, Gucci became an iconic ‘geek-chic’ brand.
In 2019, Gucci operated 487 stores for 17,157 employees, and generated €9.628 billion in sales (€8.2 billion in 2018).[5] Marco Bizzarri is CEO of Gucci since December 2014, and Alessandro Michele was creative director from January 2015 to November 23, 2022.[6] Gucci is a subsidiary of the French luxury group Kering.
History
1921 birth in Florence
The Gucci family claims its origins are rooted in the merchant city of Florence since around 1410. Guccio Giovanbattista Giacinto Dario Maria Gucci (1881–1953) left Florence for Paris, and settled in London in 1897 to work at the high-end Savoy Hotel. While working as a bellhop there, he would load/unload the luggage of the hotel’s wealthy clients, learning about their tastes in fashion, quality, fabrics, and traveling conditions. He later worked four years for the Compagnie des Wagons-Lits, the European rail company that specialized in upscale travel leisure, thus further enhancing his experience with luxurious traveling lifestyles. After World War I, he worked for the maker of fine luggage Franzi.[7][8]
In 1921, Guccio Gucci bought his own shop on Via della Vigna Nuova in Florence, Azienda Individuale Guccio Gucci,[9] where he sold imported leather luggage. He also opened a small workshop to have his own leather goods made by local craftsmen. Eventually, a larger workshop had to be acquired to house Gucci’s sixty artisans. In 1935, the invasion of Ethiopia by Mussolini led the League of Nations to impose a trade embargo on Italy. Leather became scarce, pushing Guccio Gucci to introduce other fabrics in the composition of the products, such as raffia, wicker, wood, linen and jute. The rombi motif, a Gucci signature, was created. The Guccis developed a new tanning technique to produce «cuoio grasso«, which became a Gucci trademark. In 1937, Gucci launched its handbags.[8][7]
Guccio’s wife and children all worked in the shop. Aldo, the son of Guccio, became increasingly involved in the family company since he started working there in 1925. He convinced his father to grow by opening a new shop in Rome (21 Via Condotti) in 1938, and launched more Gucci accessories (gloves, belts, wallets, keychains). During World War II, the artisans of Gucci worked on making boots for the Italian infantry.[8][7]
The company made handbags of cotton canvas rather than leather during World War II as a result of material shortages. The canvas, however, was distinguished by a signature double-G symbol combined with prominent red and green bands. After the war, the Gucci crest, which showed a shield and armored knight surrounded by a ribbon inscribed with the family name, became synonymous with the city of Florence.
Post-war Dolce Vita
After the war, Guccio Gucci distributed the shares of the company to his three sons (Aldo, Vasco and Rodolfo). In 1947, Gucci launched the Bamboo bag.[10] The brand launched its first global tagline, Quality is remembered long after price is forgotten. The iconic moccasins (Gucci loafer) were launched in 1952. Guccio Gucci died on 2 January 1953 in Milan. In November 1953, Gucci opened its first US store on 5th Avenue and 58th Street in New York. A second NY shop opened in the Saint Regis Hotel in 1960, and a third on 5th Avenue and 54th Street in 1973, leading the locals to call this NY area «Gucci City».[7]
In 1961, Gucci opened stores in London and Palm Beach, and launched the Jackie Bag. In March 1963, Gucci opened its first French store near Place Vendôme in Paris.[7] The double-G logo for belt buckles and other accessory decorations was introduced in 1964.[11] The Flora scarf was designed in 1966 by Rodolfo Gucci and Vittorio Accornero for Grace Kelly, Princess of Monaco, who became a notable consumer of Gucci products. In October 1968, Gucci opened a store at 347 Rodeo Drive, driving many Hollywood stars to endorse the brand. With the Rodeo Drive opening came the launch of Gucci’s first dresses. Gucci’s breakthrough in the United States led to its global development in Asia (Tokyo opening in 1972, Hong Kong in 1974) and the Middle East.[7] In Brussels, Aldo’s son Roberto piloted the first Gucci franchised store. By 1969, Gucci was managing ten shops in the United States. 84,000 Gucci moccasins were sold in the US alone that year. US President John F. Kennedy called Aldo Gucci the «first Italian ambassador to the United States».[8]
Gucci launched a Rolls-Royce luggage set in 1970[7] and partnered with American Motors Corporation (AMC) to create the Gucci version of the AMC Hornet that was marketed during the 1971, 1972, and 1973 model years. The Gucci Sportabout wagon became one of the first American cars to offer a special luxury trim package created by a famous fashion designer.[12][13][14] Gucci launched Gucci Perfumes (Il Mio Profumo) and its first watch (Model 2000) in 1972, its first franchised store in the US in 1973, and opened the Gucci Galleria in its Beverly Hills store in 1977, a private art gallery adjoined to the store and reserved to premium clients who were given a golden key to access it.[7][8] From 1978 to 1984 a Miami-based coachbuilder marketed a Gucci edition of the Cadillac Seville sedan (the 1978 model is exhibited at the Gucci Museum).[15]
In 1985, the Gucci loafer became part of the permanent collection of the New York Moma.[16]
1980s Gucci’s family feud
In 1969, Giorgio, the son of Aldo, had sparked the first family feud by launching Gucci Boutique on his own, which was finally reabsorbed by the family group in 1972.[8] During the 1980s, the Gucci saga eroded the family-held top management of the company and fed the press headlines. Paolo Gucci, son of Aldo, tried to launch the brand Gucci Plus on his own. Aldo was criticized for developing most of the international business under Gucci America, which he owned. In 1982, to ease tensions in the family, the Gucci group was consolidated and became a publicly-traded company, Guccio Gucci SpA.[17][7] In May 1983, Rodolfo died. His son Maurizio Gucci inherited his father’s majority stake in the company and launched a legal war against his uncle Aldo for full control of Gucci (a prosecution led by the city prosecutor Rudolph Giuliani, and with Domenico de Sole representing the Gucci family).[7] Maurizio Gucci took over the company’s direction. In 1986, Aldo Gucci, 81, with only 16.7% of Gucci left in his possession, was sentenced to a year in prison for tax evasion[18][19] (in a prison where Albert Nipon was also an inmate[7]). The artwork of the Gucci Galleria was liquidated.[7] In 1988, Maurizio Gucci sold almost 47.8% of Gucci to the Bahrain-based investment fund Investcorp (owner of Tiffany since 1984), and withheld the other 50%.[20]
Despite the family disputes, between 1981 and 1987, the sales of trademarked Gucci products reached $400 million,[21] and $227 million in 1990 alone.[22] The 1980s were characterized by a mass-production of Gucci products, which generated revenue but negatively affected Gucci’s position as an exclusive luxury brand. Maurizio Gucci hired Dawn Mello to put Gucci back on tracks.[23][22]
From 1991 to 1993, Gucci’s finances were still in the red. Maurizio Gucci was blamed for spending extravagant amounts of money on the company’s headquarters in Florence (Via delle Caldaie palazzo) and in Milan. Investcorp bought the remaining 50% of Guccio Gucci S.p.A. from Maurizio Gucci in 1993, ending the family involvement in the group.[24] In March 1995, Maurizio Gucci was shot dead in the lobby of Gucci’s Milan office.[25] His ex-wife Patrizia Reggiani served 16 years in jail for hiring the hitman to murder him.[26]
Porno Chic Revival
Dawn Mello[27] was hired in November 1989 as Gucci’s executive vice president and chief designer. She reduced the number of stores from over 1,000 to 180 in a move to rebuild the brand’s exclusivity. She also reduced the number of items sold by Gucci from 22,000 to 7,000. She revived the Bamboo bag and the Gucci loafer. She moved Gucci’s headquarters back from Milan to Florence, where the history of Gucci is deeply rooted.[22]
Dawn Mello hired Tom Ford to oversee the women’s ready-to-wear collection.[24] In 1994, Tom Ford was named creative director of Gucci.[28] Ford and Mello revisited the 1970s archives of the brand. Ford’s 1995 collection, which included the sensual white dresses with provocative cut-outs, became an instant hit.[24] Revived through the hot-bod hedonism of Tom Ford’s creations, Gucci also launched provocative products in limited edition such as silver handcuffs,[29] a G-string[30] and provocative ad campaigns such as the G logo shaved on pubic hair.[31]
Domenico De Sole, legal adviser to the Gucci family since the 1980s and CEO of Gucci since 1994, campaigned for Gucci’s leather manufacturers in Italy to keep working together and developed a partners’ program to strengthen their ties. He reviewed the pricing of each product and gradually raised Gucci’s advertising budget from $6 million in 1993 to $70 million in 1997.[32] In October 1995, the company was publicly indexed on the New York Stock Exchange with an initial stock value set at US$22.[24] Then, from 1995 to 1997, Investcorp sold its interests in Gucci for around US$1.9 billion.[33]
LVMH-PPR struggle over Gucci
By January 1999, the French luxury conglomerate LVMH, which had been buying shares of Gucci discreetly since 1995, reached 34% ownership in Gucci Group NV.[34] Seeking a way out of LVMH’s control, Tom Ford and Domenico De Sole turned to the French financier François Pinault and his group Pinault Printemps Redoute, which later became Kering, for an emergency exit. In March, Pinault’s group bought out 40% of Gucci at $75 a share, and LVMH’s shares decreased to 20.7% in a dilution process. Through the deal, PPR also purchased Yves Saint Laurent from Sanofi and sold it back for the same price to the Gucci Group.[35] This coup d’état in the fashion world launched a cold war between LVMH and the new Gucci-PPR coalition.[36] A tension occurred in December 2000 when Gucci bought 51% of Alexander McQueen’s couture house, as McQueen was also the creative designer of LVMH’s Givenchy at that time.[37] The feud around Gucci ended in September 2001 when all parties reached an agreement.[36] By the end of 2003, Tom Ford and Domenico De Sole made it official that they would not renew their contract with Gucci-PPR that ended in April 2004.[38]
Following Ford’s departure, Gucci Group retained three designers to continue the success of the company’s flagship label: John Ray, Alessandra Facchinetti and Frida Giannini, all of whom had worked under Ford’s creative direction. Facchinetti was elevated to Creative Director of Women’s wear in 2004 and designed for two seasons before leaving the company. Ray served as Creative Director of Menswear for three years. Frida Giannini – a Gucci handbag designer since 2002, head of accessories since 2004, and creative director of women’s ready-to-wear and accessories since 2005 – was appointed creative director of Gucci in 2006.[39] Patrizio di Marco, formerly CEO of Bottega Veneta, was named CEO of Gucci in 2008.[40] Both acclaimed and criticized for perpetually revisiting Tom Ford’s archives, Frida Giannini eventually toned down Ford’s explosive ‘Porno Chic’ props over the years «from sexy to sensual», and started to experiment with ‘androgynous Bohemian’ styles with a 19th-century reminiscence.[41] She also developed «neo-classics» such as the New Bamboo and the New Jackie handbags.[42] Patrizio di Marco focused on the post-2008 crisis with fewer styles and more midrange products.[43] In 2010, Gucci launched a partnership with the auction house Christie’s to develop a wider repository of the brand’s archives and provide an authenticity certification service.[42] In 2011, the company opened the Gucci Museum (Gucci Museo) in Florence to celebrate its 90th anniversary.[44] Between 2010 and 2015, 220 new Gucci stores opened, bringing the total store count to 500.[45]
Postgender geek-chic
Dresses by Alessandro Michele
In December 2014, Marco Bizzarri, former CEO of Bottega Veneta, was named CEO of Gucci.[46] He was tasked to reverse Gucci’s declining sales by giving a new impetus to the brand.[47] In January 2015, Bizzarri appointed Alessandro Michele creative director of Gucci. Alessandro Michele had been working for Gucci since 2002 and served as Frida Giannini’s deputy and head accessories designer. During the Fall show of February 2015, Alessandro Michele introduced «a different Gucci»,[48][49] one with a «sophisticated, intellectual and androgynous feel».[47]
Alessandro Michele launched the Renaissance of Gucci.[50] He revived Gucci classics like the double-G logo,[51] the Jackie O. bag,[52] and created iconic products such as the Dionysus handbag.[53] With a feminized menswear, a strong feminist stance and a ‘geek-chic’ style, Alessandro Michele introduced postgender props for Gucci.[54]
In September 2016, Gucci inaugurated the Gucci Hub, its new Milan headquarters built in the former Caproni aeronautical factory.[55] In July 2017, Gucci announced the launch of Gucci Décor, the first time the brand tested itself in the home decoration segment.[56] In April 2018, Gucci inaugurated the ArtLab, a 37,000-square-metre center of innovation outside of Florence in Italy, where new leather goods, footwear, new materials, metal hardware and packaging are developed and tested.[57] In November 2018, Gucci opened the Gucci Wooster Bookstore in New York, a 2,000-book shop curated by the founder of Dashwood Books David Strettell.[58] In April 2019, the company launched Gucci 9, a 500-employee network of 6 call centers worldwide for high-end customer service.[59] Gucci also revived its makeup collection[60] and launched its first fine jewelry collection.[61]
In 2019, Gucci’s sales reached 9.6 billion euros.[5]
In December 2020, following an agreement between Kering and Alibaba, Gucci launched two stores (fashion and beauty) on Tmall.[62]
In May 2021, Gucci launched a collection of glasses, Hollywood Forever.[63][64]
On November 23, 2022, Alessandro Michele left the post of creative director of Gucci.[65]
Disney Collection
Since 2019, originally in celebration of Mickey Mouse’s 90th birthday, Gucci has held a collection of Disney apparel, including for Lunar New Year.[66]
Corporate structure
Gucci’s holding company Guccio Gucci S.p.A. is based in Florence, Italy, and is a subsidiary of the French luxury group Kering. In 2018, Gucci operated 540 stores for 14,628 employees. The company generated €9.628 billion in revenue (€8.2 billion in 2018), and €3,947 billion in profits (€3.2 billion in 2018).[5]
Governance
In the history of Gucci, up until the end of the Gucci family era, the design, promotion, and production of Gucci products were handled by the members of the Gucci family.[67]
- CEO
- Since 2014: Marco Bizzarri
- 2008–2014: Patrizio di Marco [68]
- 2004–2008: Mark Lee [69]
- 1994–2004: Domenico De Sole
- Creative designers
- Since 2015: Alessandro Michele
- 2006–2015: Frida Giannini
- 1995–2004: Tom Ford
- 1989–1995: Dawn Mello
Initiatives
Culture
In 2011, the company opened the Gucci Museum (Gucci Museo) inside the 14th-century Palazzo della Mercanzia in Florence to celebrate its 90th anniversary.[70][44] In 2016, Alessandro Michele curated two additional rooms dedicated to Tom Ford’s collections.[71] In January 2018, following a renovation, the Gucci Museum reopened with a new name, the Gucci Garden, and a new restaurant within its walls, the Gucci Osteria, managed by Massimo Bottura.[72] The Gucci Osteria was awarded one Michelin star in November 2019.[73] In February 2020, a second Gucci Osteria opened on the rooftop of the Gucci Rodeo Drive store in Los Angeles.[74]
In April 2017, Gucci financed the restoration of the Boboli Gardens at the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.[75] In June 2019, Gucci financed the restoration of the historic Rupe Tarpea and Belvedere Gardens in Rome.[76]
In 2008, Gucci launched the Gucci Tribeca Documentary Fund, an $80,000 fund to finance movies promoting social change and presented at the Tribeca Film Festival.[77] By 2011, the fund grew to $150,000, including $50,000 for a newly created Women Documentary Award.[78] In 2011, with the Venice Film Festival, Gucci also launched the ‘Gucci Award for Women in Cinema’ to underline the impact of women in film-making.[79]
From 2005 to 2015, Gucci donated $20 million to UNICEF’s Schools for Africa program. Once Chime for Change was created, it became the funding vehicle of the Gucci-UNICEF partnership.[80] Chime for Change was founded in February 2013 by Frida Giannini, Salma Hayek and Beyoncé as a global campaign for the improvement of education, health and justice for women worldwide.[81] In June 2013, Chime for Change organized the Sound of Change Live concert which generated $4 million to fund 200 projects in 70 countries.[82] In December 2013, Gucci inked a partnership with Twitter and Women Who Code to create the women-focused hackathon Chime Hack.[83]
Gucci sells a yellow t-shirt that reads «My Body My Choice» and redistributes its proceeds to Chime for Change.[84] In July 2013, activist Lydia Emily was commissioned to paint a mural on Skid Row, Los Angeles of a woman named Jessica, who is a survivor of human trafficking.[85] In January 2019, Chime for Change launched the murals campaign «To Gather Together» promoting gender equality and designed by the artist MP5.[86] In 2020, Gucci launched an «Unconventional Beauty» ad campaign, including a model with Down syndrome.[87]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Gucci pledged €2 million to two crowdfunding campaigns, the first to support the Italian Civil Protection Department, and the second for the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund.[88]
Environment
In 2015, Gucci launched its own environmental profit and loss initiative.[89] In October 2017, Gucci announced it would ban furs from its stores in 2018.[90] In June 2018, the brand launched ‘Equilibrium’, its platform to communicate on its social and environmental efforts and progress.[91] In September 2019, Marco Bizzarri announced Gucci’s intention to go entirely carbon neutral.[92] In 2020, Gucci joined the UNDP-led Lion’s Share Fund to support wildlife conservation.[93]
In popular culture
Eponymous adjective
«Gucci» is often used as an eponymous adjective; for example, «I feel Gucci!» or «that’s so Gucci!» are used to describe feeling luxurious or referencing something as being luxurious.[94][95] The earliest known instance of Gucci used in this sense is Lenny Kravitz describing his bedroom as «very Gucci»[96] in the September 1999 issue of Harper’s Bazaar.[96]
Movies
After initially announcing plans for a movie about the Gucci dynasty in 2007,[97] filmmaker Ridley Scott detailed specifics about his movie in November 2019; titled House of Gucci, the movie would star Lady Gaga as Patrizia Reggiani and Adam Driver as Maurizio Gucci.[98] House of Gucci‘s world premiere took place at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square in London on November 9, 2021.[99] In 2000, Martin Scorsese had also announced plans to make a movie about the Gucci family.[100]
Guinness World Records
- 1974: The Model 2000 Gucci watch broke the record for selling more than one million units in two years.[8]
- 1998: The Gucci «Genius Jeans» set the record as the most expensive pair of jeans. The jeans were distressed, ripped, and covered with African-inspired beads and were priced at US$3,134 in Milan.[101][102]
Counterfeiting
During the 1970s, the explosive popularity of Gucci turned the brand into a prime target of the counterfeiting industry.[7] The Gucci workshops elaborated the brindle pigskin tanning technique that became a Gucci signature, and a tanning process difficult to counterfeit. In 1977 alone, Gucci launched 34 lawsuits for counterfeiting.[8] By the mid-1980s, the brand was involved in «thousands of confiscations and lawsuits all over the world».[103]
In 2013, the UK’s Intellectual Property Office issued a ruling that Gucci had lost the rights to its GG trademark in the UK «to a version of the GG logo in four categories, which encompassed garments such as bracelets, shoulder bags, scarves and coats».[104] However, «according to Gucci, the ruling does not affect the use of its GG logo in the region» because «Gucci is the owner of several other valid registrations for this mark, including a Community Trade Mark (covering the European Union) for its iconic GG logo and those rights are directly enforceable in the U.K.»[104]
In November 2008, the website TheBagAddiction.com was shut down after being sued by Gucci for selling counterfeit products.[105] In 2013, Gucci cracked down on 155 domain names used by counterfeiters to sell fake Gucci products.[106] In 2015, Gucci’s parent company Kering sued the Chinese website Alibaba for listing a lot of «obviously fake Gucci products» on its website.[107] In April 2016, Gucci’s anti-counterfeiting legal actions backfired when the targeted products were the papier-mâché shaped exactly like Gucci products and burned by Chinese people during the ancestral Qingming Jie tradition.[108] In April 2017, Gucci won a lawsuit against 89 Chinese websites selling fake Gucci products.[109] In October 2018, Marco Bizzarri warned the Chinese ecommerce giants Alibaba and JD.com that Gucci could not open shop on their websites as long as they would not remove the many fake Gucci products out of their listings.[110] In December 2019, Gucci sued three dozen websites selling fake Gucci products.[111]
Controversies
In April 2016, the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority banned a Gucci online video ad because it starred an «unhealthily thin» model.[112]
In February 2019, Gucci removed a black balaclava sweater with a rollup collar and a cut-out red-lipped mouth from its shelves after it had been compared to a blackface costume.[113][114] Alessandro Michele responded that his inspiration came from the flamboyant Leigh Bowery but apologized for the way it had been interpreted.[115] To address this issue, Gucci launched the ‘Gucci North America Changemakers Scholarship’ program dedicated to foster diversity within the fashion industry with a $5-million annual fund to support non-profits and community-based programs involved with «the African-American community and communities of color at-large».[116] In May 2019, the Sikhs community in India criticized Gucci’s cultural appropriation of a religious item when the Italian brand commercialized turbans at $800 apiece.[117] In July 2019, Gucci appointed a Global Head of Diversity to address the brand’s latest issues with cultural diversity.[118] In October 2019, Gucci launched a $1.5-million scholarship program for US students traditionally underrepresented in the fashion industry.[119]
In May 2019, Kering agreed to pay a $1.25-billion tax settlement with the Italian fiscal authorities following Gucci’s tax irregularities during the 2011-2017 fiscal periods.[120]
During a September 2019 show that resembled a défilé of mental patients, catwalk model Ayesha Tan Jones held up their hands-on which «mental health is not fashion» was written, a reaction to the brand’s inappropriate commercial use of the imagery of mental illness.[121]
See also
- Made in Italy
Bibliography
- Forden, Sara G. (2001). The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed. Custom House. ISBN 978-0060937751.
- Gucci, Patricia (2016). In the Name of Gucci: A Memoir. Crown Archetype. ISBN 978-0804138932.
- Gucci, Jenny (2008). Gucci Wars: How I Survived Murder and Intrigue at the Heart of the World’s Biggest Fashion House. John Blake. ISBN 978-1844545322.
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- ^ Tom Hancock, Gucci wary of Chinese ecommerce tie-up because of fakes, Ft.com, 15 October 2018
- ^ Sundar, Sindhu (6 December 2019). «Gucci Goes After Alleged Counterfeiters in New Suit». WWD. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ Sweney, Mark (6 April 2016). «Gucci ad banned over ‘unhealthily thin’ model». The Guardian. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
- ^ Whitney Bauck, Gucci apologizes for controversial ‘blackface’ sweater, Fashionista.com, 7 February 2019
- ^ Holcombe, Madeline (7 February 2019). «Gucci apologizes after social media users say sweater resembles blackface». CNN. Archived from the original on 8 February 2019. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
- ^ Sarah Young, Gucci’s blackface scandal: Creative director breaks silence over controversial jumper, Independent.co.uk, 13 February 2019
- ^ Sandra Song, Gucci Launches Changemakers Program to Further Diversity, Papermag.com, 19 March 2019
- ^ Kimberly Yam, Sikhs Speak Out Against Gucci’s $800 Turban, Huffpost.com, 16 May 2019
- ^ Ellie Violet Bramley, Gucci hires diversity chief after criticism over insensitive designs, Theguardian.com, 30 July 2019
- ^ «Gucci launches diversity US scholarship program». AP NEWS. 7 October 2019. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
- ^ Parodi, Emilio; White, Sarah (9 May 2019). «Gucci owner Kering agrees record Italian tax settlement». Reuters.com. Archived from the original on 7 September 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
- ^ Mallenbaum, Carly. «Model protests Gucci runway that featured straitjackets: ‘Mental health is not fashion’«. USA Today. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
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1
Как правильно пишется слово гучи или гуччи? Как пишется по-английски?
Как правильно на русском написать «гучи» или «гуччи«? Или же есть какие-то другие варианты? Как правильно написать по-английски?
1 ответ:
1
0
На русском языке, правильно писать «Гуччи», на английском — Gucci. Видимо речь идёт об итальянском доме моды House of Gucci (Дом Гуччи), который является известным производителем одежды, парфюмерии, текстиля и аксессуаров.
Этот дом моды назван по имени его основателя — Гуччио Гуччи (Guccio Gucci).
Читайте также
Вот такие вот традиции написания. Кстати, раньше «женщина» писалась как «женчина».
Иезуит — член Орден иезуитов — монашеского ордена «Общества Иисуса» Римско-католической церкви, основанного в 1534 году в Париже.
Правильно будет так:
Я редактирую свой ответ только для того, чтобы исправить замеченные ошибки (расчленение составного союза при наличии частицы ТОЛЬКО).
Я редактирую свой ответ, только чтобы исправить замеченные ошибки (частица ТОЛЬКО относится к союзу).
А вот как классики используют эти конструкции: «Я и попросила вас сюда для того только, чтобы проститься с вами» (И. C. Тургенев. Ася). «Они лгут, обманывают себя и других в самых утонченных формах, только чтобы как-нибудь затемнить, заглушить сознание» (Л. Н. Толстой).
Разница в грамматике и стилевой семантике. Если мы расчленяем составной союз ДЛЯ ТОГО ЧТОБЫ, то связь предложений взаимообусловленная. Если используем простой союз ЧТОБЫ, то имеем чисто подчинительную связь придаточного предложения по отношению к главному (главное предложение не зависит от придаточного и может обойтись без него).
Перекопанный — это причастие, а не отглагольное прилагательное (отглагольные прилагательные пишутся с одной буквой н — кованый, жёваный, хотя здесь тоже есть исключения, а именно: когда есть суффикс -ованн-, -ёванн-, например рискованный — это отглагольное прилагательное, но тут две буквы н);
в слове есть приставка (а если просто копаный — будет одна буква н);
это не краткая форма (перекопан);
все это означает, что «перекопанный» будет правильно писать с двумя буквами нн.
Правильное написание — диссонанс. Префикс «дис» может быть латинским или греческим. В первом случае (лат. dis) означает «порознь», «раздельно». Например, диссоциация — дословно разделение, разъединение. Во втором случае (греч. dys) означает затруднение, нарушение расстройство. Вторая же часть слова — латинского происхождения, от лат. sonor — звук, sonabilis — звучный, sonans — гласный звук, sonax — звучный, громкий. В русском языке много слов с этим корнем: прибор сонар, соната, сонорный (согласный, но «со звуком») и др. В английском языке звук — sound. Лат. dissono значит «нестройно звучать». Таким образом и получаются две буквы «с» подряд.
У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Гуччи.
«Гу́ччи» (итал. Gucci), также «Дом Гу́ччи» (англ. House of Gucci)[1] — итальянский дом моды, производитель одежды, парфюмерии, аксессуаров и текстиля класса «люкс».
Принадлежит французскому конгломерату Kering[en]*, до июня 2013 года носившему название Pinault-Printemps-Redoute.
В 2019 году Gucci управляла 487 магазинами, в которых работали 17 157 сотрудников, а объем продаж составил 9,628 млрд евро.
В 2022 году Gucci оказался третьим в списке самых дорогих брендов (уступив лишь немецкому производителю автомобилей Porsche и французскому модному дому Louis Vuitton); является второй крупнейшей по объёмам продаж компанией-производителем модных товаров после LVMH.
С декабря 2014 года генеральным директором Gucci является Марко Биццарри, с января 2015 по ноябрь 2022 — креативный директор Алессандро Микеле.
История
Дом моды «Гуччи» был основан Гуччо Гуччи (итал. Guccio Gucci, 1881—1953) во Флоренции в 1921 году[2]. В молодости Гуччо некоторое время жил в Лондоне, где работал официантом в отеле «Савой». Кожаные сумки и чемоданы постояльцев произвели на него такое впечатление, что, вернувшись во Флоренцию, он решил заняться шорным мастерством и открыл мастерскую, которая занималась изготовлением сёдел, сапог для верховой езды и чемоданов. В 1938 году Гуччо открыл свой фирменный магазин в Риме. 1947 год — год рождения сумки с бамбуковыми ручками, в 1950-е годы появились ткань с узором из переплетённых лент и замшевые мокасины с металлическими застёжками, ставшие «фирменными» изделиями компании.
При AV предприятие было единым целым, однако после его смерти его дети и внуки ввязались в затяжные и дорогостоящие имущественные споры. На этих разногласиях наживались виднейшие юристы страны. Сейчас семейство крайне стыдится проявлений злобы и мстительности своих предков, сопровождавших эти споры[3].
После смерти Гуччо в 1953 году основанное им дело перешло к его сыновьям Альдо и Родольфо, каждый из которых получил по 50 % компании. Альдо переехал из Италии в США, где смог расширить дело, открыв магазины в Нью-Йорке, Лондоне и Париже, а затем, в конце 1960-х, — в Гонконге, Токио и Сеуле.
В это время появляется современный логотип компании — переплетённые буквы GG (инициалы Гуччо Гуччи), шёлковый шарф Flora, который носила Грейс Келли, и сумка с ручкой через плечо Jackie O, которую сделала знаменитой Джеки Кеннеди.
Альдо Гуччи расширил интересы компании, заключив соглашение с компанией American Motors: автомобиль Hornet 1972 года, с версией кузова Sportabout, стал одним из первых американских автомобилей, выпускавшихся в специальной комплектации, созданной дизайнером из мира моды. Салон был обшит бежевой тканью в зелёную и красную полоску с логотипами «Гуччи», цвет кузова был специально подобран согласно дизайнерскому решению.
В 1977 году Альдо назначил своего сына Паоло вице-президентом и главным управляющим Gucci Shops Inc и американским подразделением по производству парфюмерии Gucci Parfums. Благодаря ослабевшему вниманию со стороны брата, жившего в Италии, основной контроль над управлением парфюмерным подразделением перешёл к его семье, в то время как у Родольфо остался пакет лишь в 20 % акций.
В 1978 году Паоло, желавший модернизировать и расширить производство, был отстранён от работы в итальянском подразделении, так как Родольфо желал сохранить эксклюзивное производство «ручного» качества, что привело к открытому конфликту между дядей и племянником[2].
В конце 1970-х годов серия неверных деловых решений и семейные ссоры практически привели компанию к банкротству. В 1979 году Альдо, желая поддержать парфюмерную линию Gucci Parfums, запустил линию Gucci Accessories Collection, включавшую в себя такие мелкие аксессуары, как косметички, ручки и зажигалки, которые стоили гораздо дешевле, чем основные аксессуары, выпускавшиеся компанией.
Товары линии Gucci Accessories Collection расходились куда лучше, чем более дорогая продукция фирмы, и этот факт стал одним из основных причин упадка: процент продаж эксклюзивных изделий упал, в то время как множество магазинов наводнили дешёвые мелочи от «Гуччи». Репутация компании была подорвана:
В 1960-х и 1970-х годах Gucci была на вершине благодаря таким именам, как Одри Хепбёрн, Грейс Келли и Жаклин Кеннеди Онассис. Но в 1980-х Gucci теряет своё положение, становясь клейким аэропортовым брендом.
— Грэйдон Картер[en], редактор Vanity Fair
В начале 1980-х Паоло Гуччи захотел выпускать продукцию под своим собственным именем. Для того чтобы отвоевать себе это право, ему пришлось обратиться в суд. В ответ Альдо уволил сына со всех занимаемых им постов, после чего Паоло сообщил в налоговую службу США о финансовых махинациях своего отца. В результате, в 1986 году Альдо Гуччи был признан виновным в использовании офшорных компаний для сокрытия прибыли и уклонении от уплаты налогов на сумму в 7 миллионов долларов США и был приговорён к тюремному заключению на срок 1 год и 1 день (в свою очередь, в 1994 году Паоло провёл за решёткой 5 недель за невыплату алиментов на сумму почти в полмиллиона долларов своей бывшей второй супруге Дженни Гарвуд на содержание их дочери Джеммы[2]).
В 1983 году, после смерти Родольфо, принадлежащая ему доля в компании перешла к его сыну Маурицио Гуччи, что вылилось в очередной конфликт между двумя ветвями семейства.
Маурицио вместе с Паоло, сыном Альдо, решил увеличить своё влияние в Совете директоров компании и образовал для этого отделение лицензирования Gucci Licensing в Голландии. После того как остальное семейство покинуло компанию, впервые за последние годы лишь один человек стоял у руля компании Gucci. Маурицио прекратил семейные разногласия, которые разрывали компанию изнутри, и решил искать другие таланты во имя будущего Gucci.
В 1987 году Паоло, по некоторым данным, продал свою долю в семейном бизнесе компании Investcorp за сумму в 41 млн долл. В то же время он заявил о долгах на сумму в 90 миллионов. Пытаясь избежать банкротства и желая погасить задолженность, за неделю до смерти он подписал план реструктуризации собственных долгов. Его неожиданная кончина стала причиной битвы за наследство в виде усадьбы и конюшен с чистокровными арабскими скакунами в Распере[en], Западный Сассекс (Великобритания), оценённое примерно в 3 миллиона фунтов, между его второй женой Дженни Гарвуд и последней супругой Пенни Армстронг[2].
Корпорация Gucci
Изменения в компании, произошедшие в конце 1980-х годов, сделали Gucci одним из самых влиятельных и прибыльных модных домов в мире. В октябре 1995 года компания стала публичной и выпустила акции на AEX и NYSE по $22 за каждую. 1997 год также оказался весьма удачным для компании, так как ею была приобретена часовая компания Severin-Montres, переименованная впоследствии в Gucci Timepieces.
Новый менеджмент
В 1989 году Маурицио Гуччи убеждает Доун Мело (англ. Dawn Mello), известную воскрешением популярности магазина New York’s Bergdorf Goodman в 1970-х, присоединиться к реструктурированной Gucci Group в качестве исполнительного вице-президента и креативного директора. Gucci America возглавил юрист Доменико Де Соле (итал. Domenico De Sole), помогавший Маурицио в реструктуризации компании в 1987—1989 годах.
Для дома Гуччи работали модельеры Джофри Бин[en] и Келвин Кляйн, в 1990 году по настоянию Мело для создания коллекций женской одежды был приглашён молодой и практически неизвестный Том Форд, до того два года проработавший для компании Perry Ellis[en].
Начало 1990-х стали худшими годами в истории компании. Благодаря действиям Маурицио снизились темпы продаж аксессуаров, до того приносившие лишь в США 110 миллионов долларов ежегодно. Компания терпела убытки и была на грани банкротства, всё это вызывало недовольство у руководства Gucci America и акционеров Investcorp — через несколько лет большинством голосов управляющие отстранили Маурицио от руководства. В августе 1993 года он был вынужден продать свою долю в семейном бизнесе компании Investcorp.
Менее чем через год после ухода Маурицио, Доун Мелло вернулась в Bergdorf Goodman. Том Форд, ставший креативным директором, захотел создать совершенно новый стиль компании, а Доменико Де Соле, теперь занявший должность президента и главного исполнительного директора Gucci Group NV, в этом его поддержал.
27 марта 1995 года Маурицио был застрелен наёмным убийцей, нанятым его бывшей женой Патрицией[4].
Тем временем, Доменико Де Соле отклоняет запрос компании Arnault на совете директоров, где та хотела получить доступ к конфиденциальной информации компании по заработку, стратегическим собраниям и дизайнерским концептам. Де Солe противодействует выпуском новых акций для ослабления значимости пакетов акций Arnault. Он также приближается к французской компании Pinault-Printemps-Redoute (PPR) с целью возможности формирования стратегического союза. Франсуа Пино, основатель компании, соглашается с этой идеей и приобретает 37 млн акций компании, или 40 % доли. Доля Arnault разбавлена до 20 %. Юридическая борьба продолжилась требованием поставить под вопрос законность нового партнёрства Gucci-PPR. Тем не менее, суды Нидерландов окончательно поддержали сделку PPR, так как она не нарушает деловые законы страны. PPR сейчас владеет 68 % группы. Вторым большим акционером является Crédit Lyonnais с 11 %. К сентябрю 2001 года соглашение было распределено между Gucci Group, LVMH и PPR. 2001 год также стал невероятным годом для Gucci Group с приобретением процентов компаний Bottega Venetta, Di Modolo, Balenciaga и с формированием партнёрства со Stella McCartney.
После неудачной попытки возобновления контракта с PPR в 2003 году, Том Форд и Доменико Де Соле решают покинуть Gucci Group. Последнее шоу Форда для Gucci было возвращением к корням его первой успешной коллекции — к культу знаменитости. На рекламных принтах отображались модели в гладких, простых платьях, вдохновленные гламуром звёзд немого кино 1920-х. Форд повысил ценность доступной одежды прет-а-порте и использовал такие экзотические материалы, как кожу аллигатора и свиную кожу. Его коллекция для Yves Saint Laurent последовала после лидера предыдущего сезона в женской одежде от Gucci с форменными кимоно и азиатскими платьями и с классическими смокингами и куртками в мужской коллекции. Объявление о его уходе из компании сопроводила полная продажа многих вещей в нью-йоркских магазинах, а списки ожидания его последних аксессуаров были сформированы всего в течение нескольких дней после показа коллекции в Милане. В 2005 году Том Форд начал разрабатывать дизайн линии косметики для Estee Lauder и спланировал свою собственную линию прет-а-порте и аксессуаров под лейблом Tom Ford.
Наряды от Алессандра Факкинетти
После ухода Форда Gucci Group удержала дизайнеров для продолжения успеха главного лейбла компании — Алессандру Факкинетти (итал. Alessandra Facchinetti) и Фриду Джаннини (итал. Frida Giannini), которые работали под креативным руководством Форда. Факкинетти выросла в должности до Креативного директора женской одежды в 2004 году и занималась дизайном в течение двух сезонов до своего ухода из компании после управленческого конфликта. Рэй занимал должность креативного директора мужской одежды в течение трёх лет до своей отставки в январе 2006 года. 32-летняя Джаннини, бывшая ответственной за разработку мужских и женских аксессуаров, в настоящее время занимает должность креативного директора целого бренда. Коллекция Джаннини весны 2006 года была восхвалена за свою цветовую гамму и энергию, впервые после сезона Форда 1995 года воссоздавая ажиотаж вокруг прет-а-порте от компании. Коллекции Джаннини с тех пор ушли от эротических образов Форда 1990-х.
В январе 2015 года стало известно о внезапной отставке Джаннини с должности креативного директора (на месяц раньше установленного контрактом срока и за неделю до показа мужской коллекции 2015 года). Её преемником стал Алессандро Микеле.
Gucci сегодня
В октябре 2017 года Gucci объявил о своем решении отказаться от использования натурального меха в своих коллекциях, начиная с 2018 года. Такое решение обусловлено желанием сделать экологичность неотъемлемой частью бизнеса компании.[5]
В январе 2018 года Gucci приобщился к технологиям и стал первым, кто выпустил собственный анимодзи (см. эмодзи) в виде собак, которые знают более 50 движений лицевых мышц, а также умеют петь и разговаривать голосом пользователя смартфона[6].
Показатели деятельности
В 2008 году бренд Gucci, согласно данным журнала Businessweek, заработал 2,2 миллиарда евро[7].
В 2019 году Gucci управляла 487 магазинами, в которых работали 17 157 сотрудников, а объем продаж составил 9,628 млрд евро.
В 2022 году Gucci оказался третьим в списке самых дорогих брендов, после немецкого производителя автомобилей Porsche и французского модного дома Louis Vuitton; выручка марки выросла на 4 %, по сравнению с предыдущим годом, и составила 2,6 миллиарда евро[8].
Kering
Eau de Parfum II
Kering[en] — международная группа, базирующаяся в Париже (Франция), специализирующаяся на товарах класса «люкс» и модных товарах[9].
Кроме Gucci, включает в себя следующий бренды:
Бренд | Год присоединения | Страна |
---|---|---|
Gucci | 1999 | Италия |
Yves Saint Laurent | 1999 | Франция |
Boucheron | 2000 | Франция |
Bottega Veneta | 2001 | Италия |
Balenciaga | 2001 | Испания |
Alexander McQueen | 2001 | Великобритания |
Brioni | 2011 | Италия |
Girard-Perregaux | 2011 | Швейцария |
JeanRichard | 2011 | Швейцария |
Qeelin | 2012 | Гонконг |
Pomellato | 2012 | Италия |
Dodo | 2012 | Италия |
Ulysse Nardin | 2014 | Швейцария |
Lindberg | 2021 | Дания |
Благотворительная деятельность
В марте 2020 года во время эпидемии коронавируса в Италии компания пожертвовала больницам Ломбардии, Венето, и Лацио несколько миллионов защитных масок; в Тоскану было отправлено 1 100 000 масок и 55 000 защитных костюмов для врачей[источник не указан 888 дней].
Примечания
- ↑ Gucci - Wiktionary. en.wiktionary.org. Дата обращения: 30 июля 2020. Архивировано 23 ноября 2020 года.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Wolfgang Achtner. Obituary: Paolo Gucci Архивная копия от 25 сентября 2015 на Wayback Machine Independent, 14 октября 1995 г. (англ.)
- ↑ • Дэвид С. Лэндс. стр.9 Книги «Династии взлеты и падения самых известных семейных предприятий мира» (недоступная ссылка — история ). (недоступная ссылка)
- ↑ Жани Саме. Высокая мода = Chere Haute Couture / пер. с фр.. — СПб.: «Азбука-классика», 2010. — 320 с. — 15 000 экз. — ISBN 978-5-9985-0867-7.
- ↑ Italian fashion house Gucci to go fur-free in 2018, says CEO. Дата обращения: 12 октября 2017. Архивировано 12 октября 2017 года.
- ↑ У Gucci появился собственный эмодзи. life.ru. Дата обращения: 1 февраля 2018. Архивировано 3 февраля 2018 года.
- ↑ История бренда Gucci — официальный сайт Gucci — www.gucci.com (Gucci online) | Бренд Gucci online Архивировано 23 июня 2010 года.
- ↑ Как один дизайнер сделал Gucci любимым брендом зумеров и почему от него решили избавиться? // Lenta.ru, 9 декабря 2022
- ↑ Recurring operating income breakdown by activity (2016). Kering.com. Дата обращения: 24 июля 2017. Архивировано из оригинала 12 февраля 2019 года.
Ссылки
- gucci.com - Официальный сайт Gucci
- История бренда Gucci на brendov.net
- Как один дизайнер сделал Gucci любимым брендом зумеров и почему от него решили избавиться? (о креативном директоре Алессандро Микеле) // 9 декабря 2022
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