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Stephen Jones (milliner)

British milliner (born 1957)

Stephen Jones (milliner)

Summary

British milliner (born 1957)

FieldValue
honorific_suffix
imageStephen Jones (1).jpg
captionJones in 2007
nameStephen Jones
birth_date
birth_placeWirral Peninsula, Cheshire, England
educationLiverpool College, Saint Martin's School of Art
label_name
awardsOrder of the British Empire,(OBE) Outstanding Contribution to Fashion, British Fashion Awards 2009
websiteStephenJonesMillinery.com

Stephen Jones OBE (born 1957) is a British milliner based in London, who is considered one of the most radical and important milliners of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. His work is known for its inventiveness and high level of technical expertise. Jones co-curated the 2009 exhibition Hats: An Anthology for the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Early life

Stephen Jones was born on the Wirral Peninsula in Cheshire and educated at Liverpool College. From an early age, his mother instilled in him an appreciation of art by taking him around the Walker Art Gallery, Speke Hall, and to National Trust properties around the North West.

He studied art at foundation level at the High Wycombe College of Art. In 1975 he travelled to London to see the exhibition Fashion from 1900 to 1939 at the V&A, which inspired him to pursue a career in the fashion industry. This led him to apply to study fashion design under Elisabeth Suter, at the Saint Martin's School of Art, London, where he was the sole male student in his year. Although he enjoyed being taught by Peter Lewis Crown, the designer-owner of the London couture house Lachasse, he had little prior sewing experience, and so in order to develop his skills Crown secured Jones a summer placement in Lachasse's tailoring workroom.

Jones soon requested a transfer to the next-door millinery department presided over by Shirley Hex, but was told he had to make a hat from scratch first. The hat he eventually submitted, his first original millinery creation, was a cardboard pillbox covered in blue crêpe de Chine and trimmed with a plastic iris, sprayed silver that his mother had received as a free gift from a petrol station in the 1960s. In his innocence, Jones had not realised that millinery flowers were traditionally made of silk, but Hex approved the hat, commenting on the flower's modernity. Between 1976 and 1979 Jones spent his summer breaks working for Hex and learning about millinery methods and techniques. Through hats he developed a keen interest in fashion history, particularly the drama and exaggerated glamour of the 1950s.

Jones left Saint Martin's in 1979, the same year that he became a regular attendee of London's Blitz nightclub in Covent Garden for New Romantics and fans of new wave music. Many of the Blitz Kids became his first clients, with Jones creating outlandish hats for them to wear to the club.

Millinery career

Jones designed a line of hats for Fiorucci in 1979. It was an instant success, with Jones commenting in 2008: "Overnight, I had a business".

1982 saw Jones' first Paris fashion show and his first televised show (for the BBC's Riverside) By this point, he was able to count Diana, Princess of Wales as a regular customer, in addition to his clients from Blitz, and had a hat commissioned by the Victoria & Albert Museum for their newly refurbished Costume Court. This was the beginning of Jones' long and fruitful relationship with the V&A, culminating in the Hats: An Anthology exhibition of 2009 that he co-curated with Oriole Cullen. One of his hats appeared on the December 1982 cover of Tatler, the first time his work had featured on a magazine cover; the hat is now in the V&A.

Jones relocated his studio to Lexington Street in 1984. That year, Jean Paul Gaultier invited him to Paris to make hats for his show, his first designs for a Paris couturier, and he also made hats for Thierry Mugler. After their second show together, Gaultier ensured that Jones received full credit for his hats, therefore ensuring that the Paris fashion world was made aware of his work. In 1984 he also sold his first designs to a department store, Bloomingdale's in New York.

Jones was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2010 New Year Honours.

Collections

This is a list of Stephen Jones' bi-annual hat collections since 1980. The collections from Fall 1981 to Fall 1984 were unnamed.

  • 1980: Fall-Winter: First Collection
  • 1981: Spring-Summer: The Hanging Gardens of Babylon
  • 1985: Spring-Summer: Point Zero Fall-Winter: For The Heart of Woman and the Soul of Man
  • 1986: Spring-Summer: Passport to Pleasure Fall-Winter: Heads of State
  • 1987: Spring-Summer: She Fall-Winter: Stephen Jones World +
  • 1988: Spring-Summer: Sunset on Suburbia Fall-Winter: Room Service
  • 1989: Spring-Summer: Ole Steamy Fall-Winter: Forty Five Degrees
  • 1990: Spring-Summer: Passion on the Pampas Fall-Winter: In Orbit
  • 1991: Spring-Summer: Shriek With Chic Fall-Winter: Glamé
  • 1992: Spring-Summer: The Devil is a Woman Fall-Winter: Norma Desmond Lives
  • 1993: Spring-Summer: Souvenirs Fall-Winter: Xanadu
  • 1994: Spring-Summer: Miss World Fall-Winter: Rococo Futura
  • 1995: Spring-Summer: Legasty Fall-Winter: Les Girls
  • 1996: Spring-Summer: Untitled '96 Fall-Winter: Contours
  • 1997: Spring-Summer: Lotus Eaters Fall-Winter: Murder by Millinery
  • 1998: Spring-Summer: E=mc2 Fall-Winter: Millinery Computer
  • 1999: Spring-Summer: Pic 'n' Mix Fall-Winter: Celebrations
  • 2000: Spring-Summer: Nursery Fall-Winter: Blah Blah Blah
  • 2001: Spring-Summer: Icon Fall-Winter: Queens
  • 2002: Spring-Summer: High Fall-Winter: North
  • 2003: Spring-Summer: South Fall-Winter: Poseur
  • 2004: Spring-Summer: Hollywood Regency Fall-Winter: La Prima Donna
  • 2005: Spring-Summer: Handmade in England Fall-Winter: Jubilee
  • 2006: Spring-Summer: Travelogue Fall-Winter: Time Travel
  • 2007: Spring-Summer: Artifice Fall-Winter: Shangri-La
  • 2008: Spring-Summer: Desert Rose Fall-Winter: Covent Garden
  • 2009: Spring-Summer: Albertopolis Fall-Winter: VandA
  • 2010: Spring-Summer: ABC Fall-Winter: XYZ
  • 2011: Spring-Summer: Drifting and Dreaming Fall-Winter: Topsy Turvy
  • 2012: Spring-Summer: Chinoiserie-on-Sea Fall-Winter: This is Tomorrow
  • 2013: Spring-Summer: West Fall-Winter: Art School
  • 2014: Spring-Summer: Carte Blanche Fall-Winter: Garbo-Gabo
  • 2015: Spring-Summer: Hot House Fall-Winter: Hatsville USA
  • 2016: Spring-Summer: The Perfect Hat for... Fall-Winter: Soho
  • 2017: Spring-Summer: Shade Fall-Winter: Haute Couture & Pret-a-Porter
  • 2018: Spring-Summer: Hats Fall-Winter: Crowns
  • 2019: Spring-Summer: Parfum Fall-Winter: #tophat
  • 2020: Spring-Summer: **123 '''Fall-Winter: **Its About Time'''
  • 2021: Spring-Summer: Analogue Fairydust Fall-Winter: French Kiss
  • 2022: Spring-Summer: Bonnes Vacances Fall-Winter: Playlist
  • 2023: Spring-Summer: El Morocco Fall-Winter: Why, why not?
  • 2024: Spring-Summer: Cymru Fall-Winter: A Muse à Paris
  • 2025: Spring-Summer: The CurveFall-Winter: SENSEational

In 1988 Jones moved again, to Heddon Street. His salon and workshop are based on Great Queen Street, Covent Garden, London as of 2013.

Diffusion lines and non-millinery designs

In 1990, Jones launched a Miss Jones diffusion line for hats, and in 1993, this was followed by Jonesgirl which was exclusive to Japan. The Stephen Jones brand has had a strong presence in Japan since 1990, when Jones struck a licensing deal for T-shirts, cosmetic bags, and handkerchiefs to be manufactured there under his name; this was followed by Stephen Jones Kimonos in 1991, gloves in 1993, sunglasses in 1992, and handbags in 2002.

Jones has occasionally designed garments and accessories other than hats. In 1983 he designed dresses for Susanne Bartsch's shop in SoHo, New York and furs for Sol Feldman Furs, New York, and created his first shoe line for Sergio Rossi in 1987. He has had a lasting success with his scarf range, which was launched in 1988, and continues being sold through his millinery salon as of 2024. He has also experimented with non-fashion mediums, including ceramics in 1985 and interior design in 1991.

Jones designed two mannequins for display at the Simone Handbag Museum in Seoul, South Korea.

Design partnerships

[[Chanel Iman]] modelling a Stephen Jones hat for the Christian Dior Haute Couture fashion show, Autumn-Winter 2009–10.

In November 1996, Stephen Jones was the only British milliner to have control of a Paris haute couture millinery studio, or atelier de la modiste, making hats for Galliano's high-profile couture shows at Christian Dior where he is Creative Director of Hats. Since the 1980s his hats have been in great demand for multiple shows per season. For the Paris collections in early 1995 alone, he was creating human-hair hats for Josephus Thimister's first collection at Balenciaga and designs for Peter O'Brien at Marcel Rochas and Claude Montana as well as Galliano. In 2008, he made hats for Marc Jacobs, L'Wren Scott, Thom Browne, Comme des Garçons, Giles Deacon, Loewe, and Walter van Beirendonck, in addition to multiple Galliano collections, ten per year for Dior and two under Galliano's own label. Throughout his career he has designed hats for the shows of many other designers and couturiers.

''Hats: An Anthology by Stephen Jones''

The 2009 exhibition, Hats: An Anthology, held at the V&A from 24 February 2009, was inspired by Cecil Beaton's landmark exhibition, Fashion: An Anthology, held at the V&A in 1971. Beaton's exhibition showcased 1900-1971 garments donated by leading fashion designers of the 20th century and their clients, many of which entered the Museum collection afterwards, and firmly placed fashion within the Museum's remit. Along with Oriole Cullen, V&A Curator of Modern Fashion and Textiles, Jones explored the collections of the V&A and other international collections such as those at the Fashion Museum, Bath and the Hollywood archives of Warner Bros.

The exhibition was based predominantly upon hats from the V&A's collections and Stephen Jones's own archive, but also included loans from museums and collections around the world. The work of up-and-coming milliners such as Noel Stewart and Nasir Mazhar was featured alongside hats by Philip Treacy, Mitza Bricard for Dior, Claude Saint-Cyr for Norman Hartnell and Vladzio d'Attainville for Cristóbal Balenciaga. The exhibition also included hats worn by famous hat-wearers such as Gloria Guinness, Isabella Blow, Anna Piaggi, and Gertrude Shilling, as well as the hats of celebrities including Dita Von Teese, Madonna, and Boy George. Film millinery was also featured, such as Beaton's own designs for the stage and screen versions of My Fair Lady and hats worn by Ava Gardner and Marlene Dietrich. The exhibition launched during London Fashion Week with a lavish party attended by famous clients and admirers of Jones, including Piaggi, Daphne Guinness, Peter Blake, Erin O'Connor and Daisy Lowe.

The exhibition and its accompanying book (also called Hats: An Anthology) were generally well received. A month after opening, record-breaking visitor attendance figures were reported. The Evening Standard gave the exhibition four stars out of five. In the Toronto Star, the exhibition and book were described as a celebration and a delight.

The exhibition subsequently moved to New York City to be shown at the Bard Graduate Center of Decorative Arts, Design History and Material Culture, Bard College, until Spring 2012. For this exhibition, work by New York-based milliners such as Rod Keenan, Jennifer Ouellette, and Eugenia Kim, was incorporated into the show.

''Stephen Jones, Chapeaux d'artiste''

The exhibition 'Stephen Jones, chapeaux d'artiste' at the Palais Galliera in October 2004 - March 2005 presented the work of a British designer who, since his first collections in the 1980s to the most recent, is recognized by celebrities and fashion designers alike as one of the greatest contemporary milliners.

For the first time in over forty years at the Palais Galliera, an exhibition was devoted entirely to an accessory, the hat, treating it as a work of art in its own right. The exhibition focuses on Stephen Jones's creative process, the sources of inspiration behind his pieces, and the role of Paris in his work.

Stephen Jones occupies a unique position behind the scenes in the fashion world. Thanks to his collaborations, he has been involved in some of the most iconic collections from many of the world's leading fashion houses. Stephen Jones's hats highlight and complement silhouettes that have had a profound impact on the history of fashion since the 1980s... The exhibition specifically focuses on the artist's close ties with Paris, French culture and Parisian couture. When he arrived in Paris and began working with Parisian fashion houses, his vision of fashion and his creative process were totally transformed. His attachment to Paris is reflected in his own collections, in his sources of inspiration and in his chosen themes: symbols of Paris and of French history, the image of the Parisian woman, and tributes to French couturiers.

There were close to 400 works in the exhibition, including more than 170 hats, as well as Jones's archives (preparatory drawings, photographs, extracts from fashion shows, etc.) and around forty silhouettes complete with clothes and hats. These 'looks' bore witness to the enduring loyalty between Stephen Jones and some of the world's leading fashion houses, in particular Christian Dior, who he has worked with for nearly thirty years. This key figure has become the most 'Frenchified' of English milliners, endowing Paris fashion with his bold energy and boundless creativity.

References

References

  1. He is also one of the most prolific, having created hats for the [[catwalk (fashion). catwalk]] shows of many leading couturiers and [[fashion designers]], such as [[John Galliano]] at [[Christian Dior SA
  2. [https://collections.vam.ac.uk/objectid/O84319 Stephen Jones spiral hat] in the V&A collections online database. Accessed 3 April 2009
  3. [http://www.vam.ac.uk/collections/contemporary/hats/index.html Hats: An Anthology information page] {{Webarchive. link. (17 April 2009 on the V&A Museum website, accessed 1 April 2009)
  4. (2009). "Hats: An Anthology". V&A Publishing.
  5. [http://www.vam.ac.uk/microsites/hats-anthology/the-exhibition/stephen-jones.html Biography of Stephen Jones] on the V&A Museum website, accessed 1 April 2009
  6. Sherwood, James. (19 February 2007). "I taught them a lesson; As fashion's most formidable mistress, she mentored McQueen, oversaw Ozbek and goaded the great Galliano". The Independent.
  7. In 1980, Blitz's owner [[Steve Strange]] provided financial backing for Jones' first millinery salon, which opened nearby in the basement of the trendy store [[PX (store). link. (27 February 2009 , as posted on his official website. Accessed 2 April 2009)
  8. On New Year's Eve 1980, Jones had his head shaved by drunk friends, leading him to discover that without hair, his head was a perfect woman's stock size, and that he could become his own [[fit model]], developing all his ideas and designs upon himself.Limnander, Armand; [https://www.nytimes.com/indexes/2008/08/17/style/t/index.html#pageName=17jones "The Headliner: Stephen Jones makes waves as well as cloches"], for ''[[The New York Times]]'', 17 August 2008. Accessed 3 April 2009
  9. Monsef, Gity; [http://www.iqons.com/Stephen+Jones Interview with Stephen Jones] for ''Iqons'', 23 August 2008. Accessed 8 April 2009
  10. {{London Gazette. (31 December 2009)
  11. (2012-07-13). "Bags of History". Financial Times.
  12. He has worked with Galliano since 1993. Jones also created [[Vivienne Westwood]]'s iconic [[Harris Tweed]] [[crown (headgear). link. (28 May 2009 on the official website, accessed 3 April 2009)
  13. Frankel, Susannah, [https://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/susannah-frankel-tweed-running-shoes-darling-thats-absolutely-fabulous-733541.html "Tweed running shoes? Darling, that's absolutely fabulous"] for ''[[The Independent]]'', 26 June 2004; accessed 3 April 2009
  14. Bond, Gavin, ''[https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/fashion/news/and-to-top-it-all-a-hat-from-mr-jones-1612555.html And to top it all, a hat from Mr Jones]'', for ''The Independent'', 24 March 1995. Accessed 8 April 2009
  15. Johansson, Lottie; [https://web.archive.org/web/20150515005507/http://www.thenational.ae/article/20090325/LIFE/907585425/-1/NEWS "A world of hats at the cup"], for ''[[The National (Abu Dhabi)]]'', 25 March 2009. Accessed 2 April 2009
  16. Stockley, Philippa; [http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/arts/artexhibition-20653709-details/Hats:+An+Anthology+by+Stephen+Jones/artexhibitionReview.do "Hats off to the decadence in V&A"] ''Evening Standard'' 25 February 2009. Accessed 1 April 2009
  17. Livingstone, David; [https://www.thestar.com/living/article/600408 "A tip of the hat to its fabled past"] for ''The Toronto Star'', 12 March 2009. Accessed 1 April 2009
  18. "Hats: An Anthology by Stephen Jones September 15, 2011 – April 15, 2012".
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