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As a private company,Chanel guards its figures ferociously, but factoring in perfumes (Chanel No 5 remains a global best-seller eight decades after its launch), bags, cosmetics, shoes and jewellery, it ranks among the world’s top three luxury houses. At 69 (or 74, he is uncharacteristically coy, or deliberately mysterious when it comes to his age, but whatever it is, he seems both youthful and curiously ageless), Lagerfeld has enough clout even with teenagers for his H&M collection to incite near riots.
So we return to that question of indulgence, because this is a man who not only collects – and sheds – possessions like a bulimic (a sale at Christie’s of discarded 18th-century furniture and artwork from one of his houses in 2000 pocketed $21.7 million) but is also one whom it would be unwise to cross. This is because, as he said in Lagerfeld Confidential, the documentary doing the rounds of arthouse cinemas, he likes the Sword of Damocles hovering above his friendships. “That way you never take one another for granted.”
Those who cross him rarely get away with it. “Fashion is about elimination,” he says, and he probably applies this principle elsewhere. “I’m good at cutting people off. Revenge is one of my less pleasant pastimes. I can wait ten years and then pull the chair. Sometimes people don’t even know that it was me who pulled it. Some are not even worth the effort. Others are so mediocre that life takes care of them anyway.” All this is delivered with a spectacularly avuncular chuckle. When I remark that I’ve never seen him without his sunglasses, he pulls them down his nose momentarily – just long enough for me to observe that disappointingly, far from glow-in-the-dark red eyes, his are a rather clear brown.
I’m beginning to seewhy a lost soul like Lindsay Lohan said that she would like him to adopt her. For there is an internal logic to everything that he says. It might be ruthlessly brutal, but it is remarkably lacking in sentimentality and crackling with brittle humour. His is a heady mix of culture (he speaks five languages, scattering references to 16th-century poets, 20th-century philosophers and 21st-century actresses in all of them) intelligence and frivolity that flatters those swept up in his orbit into a sense of security. His team also has the satisfaction of knowing that working at Chanel is still creatively exhilarating. While Armani, Saint Laurent and Valentino, his peers from the 1970s, formulated their visions decades ago, Lagerfeld, when he has a mind to, reinvents his, sometimes recklessly so. Perhaps when he says: “I don’t take it seriously. I don’t talk about my art. I love it, I’m a clothes freak and I’m good on the job because I know more than other people technically, but you really don’t have to cry over taffeta. I’d never call myself a great designer,” he means it.
Lagerfeld’s supreme genius is for reinvention, for subversion (a Chanel cocktail dress is never simply a beautiful dress, it always carries a whiff, however subliminal, of bourgeois depravity, complete with frequent religious references) and for transmogrifying street trends into irresistible clothes with immense price tags.
But he can also, when he’s in the mood, conjure up ethereally beautiful clothes – especially for Chanel’s couture collections – that almost glow with an exquisite lightness. He was one of the first to retreat from couture in the 1960s, when it had become a trope for all that was staid and passé. But now that it is bought by a tiny elite who are only too happy to nurture its creative waywardness, he finds it thoroughly engaging again. He didn’t like the 1990s much (he spent part of it grieving for de Bascher) and the minimalist years of that decade pushed Chanel, and thus Lagerfeld, into the margins. But the need to renew rescued him and the brand, which is more desirable than ever.
Renewal is why he still has the stomach to refashion the classic Chanel 2.55 quilted bag as an alcohol ankle-tag holder, why he can be bothered to house 40 iPods with every genre of music known, why, having all but ended his formal education at 14, he became an autodidact, why he will never stop working and why, presumably, he allowed the young director Rodolphe Marconi unprecedented access to film him for months for Lagerfeld Confidential. “Oh that,” he says dismissively. “It shows nothing. It was a game – I like being a puppeteer.”
I’m not sure that the film is as unrevealing as he maintains. If nothing else, it hints at a solitude away from the madding crowd that could turn quite dark. His world view can certainly be bleak. “We deserve nothing, least of all happiness,” he says at one point, explaining where his godchildren go wrong. “Like most young people they expect too much. Everything has to be so emotional today. Emotion is so overrated.”
Does he mean this, or is it for effect? Should we resort to Freud to explain that the famous acquisitiveness is trying to fill some kind of hole, or assume that the houses, furniture, and the 19 trunks he packs for a week’s trip are wily affectations to entertain the press. Lagerfeld is not a fan of Freud. “Psychoanalysis kills creativity. It’s just a way for people to get some attention from someone other than themselves for an hour.”
The film allowed him more control than last year’s book The Beautiful Fall, Alicia Drake’s account of Saint Laurent and Lagerfeld, which contradicted the latter’s own account of his upbringing, and angered him to the extent that he took legal action against what he saw as an invasion of privacy.
Officially, he was born in 1938 and raised in the countryside outside Hamburg in considerable splendour. (Although he now says that he’s saving the full story for a posthumous autobiography, “and there will be some surprises, nothing is quite what everyone thinks”.) His father, the one with the Calvinist work ethic, owned a condensed-milk factory. His mother, the one with the unconventional approach to child-rearing, told him to speak faster because, while he was 6, she wasn’t, and if he wished to maintain her attention, he’d have to learn to precis. “Harsh, yes. One had to fight for her attention. But she was the perfect mother for me.”
Clearly their relationship worked. He liked his mother’s style, not just her contempt for the 1950s (“she vomited over all that phoney elegance”), but the fact that she stood up for him when one of his teachers demanded that he get his hair cut. “She said ‘What are you, a Nazi?’ That was pretty shocking for the time.” She liked his precocity – he certainly learnt how to amuse her more than his sisters, “in whom”, he says matter-of-factly, “no one was interested”. Surrounded by adults from another century (his godfather, “the chicest man I ever saw”, was born in 1868 and once slapped Lagerfeld around the face because he’d never heard of Ferdinand Freiligrath, a minor German poet), it doesn’t require a huge leap of the imagination to understand why he didn’t forge lasting bonds with the local children.
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