Valentino hires former Gucci designer Michele as creative director after Piccioli’s departure
MILAN — Valentino has hired former Gucci designer Alessandro Michele as creative director, after the announcement of Pierpaolo Piccioli’s departure last week, the Italian fashion house said on Thursday. Mr. Michele, 51, was born in Rome and worked for Gucci for 20 years, becoming the brand’s creative director in 2015. Known for his eclectic and […]
MILAN — Valentino has hired former Gucci designer Alessandro Michele as creative director, after the announcement of Pierpaolo Piccioli’s departure last week, the Italian fashion house said on Thursday.
Mr. Michele, 51, was born in Rome and worked for Gucci for 20 years, becoming the brand’s creative director in 2015.
Known for his eclectic and flamboyant styles, he initially helped drive soaring growth at Gucci but then abruptly left the Italian brand, owned by French luxury group Kering, at the end of 2022.
“The appointment of Alessandro Michele marks another pivotal moment for Maison Valentino,” Chairman Rachid Mohamed Rachid said in a statement.
Mr. Michele will start next week and will be based in Rome, where the fashion house is headquartered.
“It’s an incredible honor for me,” said Mr. Michele in the statement. He cited Valentino founders Valentino Garavani and Giancarlo Giammetti and said he was going “to pay homage to their influence through my own interpretation and creative vision.”
His first collection will be presented during this autumn’s Paris Fashion Week for the Spring-Summer collections 2025, after Valentino canceled its June fashion shows in the wake of the departure of the long-serving Mr. Piccioli and his bold use of colors and romantic, floor-sweeping red-carpet designs.
The group had said that it had agreed with Mr. Piccioli to end their collaboration. “Following the latest organizational announcement regarding the Maison’s Creative Direction, Valentino confirms that it will not present its upcoming Men’s and Haute Couture fashion shows in June 2024,” the group said in a statement on March 25.
Kering bought a 30% stake in Valentino last year from Qatari investment fund Mayhoola, with an option to buy the rest in five years.
“I can’t wait to see his passion, imagination and dedication at play in this new chapter for Valentino,” Francois-Henri Pinault, chairman and chief executive of Kering, said in a separate statement.
Last year, Kering’s main label Gucci recruited Sabato de Sarno — who worked behind the scenes at Valentino, alongside Mr. Piccioli — to replace Mr. Michele, and introduce a new aesthetic to the brand.
Marking a departure from his predecessor Mr. Michele, Mr. De Sarno has brought more understated glamor to Gucci in his first three runway shows in Milan. — Reuters