The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Monday, May 20, 2013
 
It Bag, Watch Out: France's Duvelleroy Folding Fan is Back
Raphaelle de Panafieu, left, and Eloise Gilles, co-owners of Duvelleroy fan maker, pose with some of their creations. Founded in 1827 by Jean-Pierre Duvelleroy, the house was among the most prestigious of the French capital's plethora of fan-makers, with a boutique on the Rue de la Paix and clients including Britain's Queen Victoria and a host of other European royals. AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere.
PARIS (AP).- Forget Balenciaga's "Giant City" and the other luxury purses that vie for the title of "It Bag" of the moment. If two young Parisian fashionistas have their way, next season's must-have accessory might just be a relic resurrected from a bygone age — the folding fan.

Eloise Gilles and Raphaelle de Panafieu left their jobs in fashion and invested their savings to rescue one of Paris' last remaining fan makers, the long-dormant house of Duvelleroy.

Their first collection — 12 exquisite models concocted by hand from traditional fabrics like silk and feathers and state-of-the-art materials like carbon fiber — is to make its retail debut later this month.

"Fans are not only elegant and feminine but they're also super practical. Whenever I go out, to parties, to restaurants and especially to clubs, I always have mine," said Panafieu, a 28-year-old who says folding fans have been her trademark ever since her father brought her one from Asia when she was a kid.

Panafieu's quirky accessory of choice became her job after she met Gilles a few years ago and the two decided to invest in a fan-making house. They discovered Duvelleroy, among the few remaining survivors of France's world-famous fan-making industry, and pooled their savings to buy the house from owner Michel Maignan, a retired auctioneer.

Two years ago, the two quit their jobs — Panafieu's in marketing at a chic Paris women's clothing label and Gilles' as a brand consultant for French luxury labels — to throw themselves into resurrecting the house.

Founded in 1827 by Jean-Pierre Duvelleroy, it was long considered among France's most prestigious fan makers, with a boutique on the tony rue de la Paix and clients including Britain's Queen Victoria and other European royals. The house was passed down through the Duvelleroy family until World War II, when Maignan's grandfather bought them out.

The postwar period was the beginning of the end for fan-makers, as women began to busy their hands with cigarettes, and nearly all of the French capital's fan houses were forced to shutter.

Duvelleroy diversified — branching out into other small accessories and eventually fan repair — and outlived its contemporaries. But it has been largely dormant for decades.

Gilles and Panafieu plunged into the Duvelleroy archive, nearly two centuries worth of fan history, which Maignan had meticulously preserved in an attic.

"It was incredible. There were fans covered in sequins so tiny you couldn't get a modern needle through them and others made from the feathers of birds that are now extinct," said Gilles.

Still, the pair wasn't aiming to replicate the styles that had cemented Duvelleroy's reputation for excellence in the 19th century.

"We wanted something really contemporary — nothing that would look like a museum piece," said Gilles. The pair hired stylists to help design their debut collection, which goes on sale in late August at Paris' upscale Franck and Fils department store.

The result: 12 models that combine just the right dose of romantic, 19th century elegance with clean-cut contemporary practicality.

In sequin-studded silk mousseline, the "Chiffon" is mounted on frames made of carbon fiber, an ultra-lightweight polymer used in jets and sports cars. The "Coral" combines dramatic red silk with a frame in an early plastic made from milk protein and formaldehyde. The "Bird of the Night" — a concoction of silk mousseline and deep purple ostrich feathers, mounted on a mother-of-pearl frame — is a shrunken variation on the massive feather fans that were all the rage in the 1800s.

Each fan requires at least 20 hours of painstaking labor, and some models, like the "Bird of the Night," need much more than that. To make the process economically viable, Gilles and Panafieu broke down the production, seeking out specialized artisans throughout France and Italy who each handle a specific task.

A "plisseur," or pleater — who normally works for Paris haute couture houses — starches and folds the silk just so. An embroiderer bedazzles it with sequins, while another artisan applies designs in gold, silver and copper foil.

Each fan passes through the hands of at least four artisans before winding up in the workshop of a master fan maker in the south of France, who assembles the parts. They say that's much cheaper than having one person go through each separate step.

But the prices remain high. The line starts at euro490 ($645) for the simplest model and climbs to euro4,500 for the feathery ones.

"It does seem expensive, but when you compare it to other luxury items, like nice handbags of jewelry, it's in that same range," Gilles said.

In addition to their own line, she and Panafieu hope to manufacture fans for fashion labels. A collaborative line between Duvelleroy and zany French designer Jean-Charles de Castelbajac — known for his colorful, kitschy clothes — is coming out in February, Gilles said. They'd also love to work with Chanel, whose celebrity designer Karl Lagerfeld was rarely seen without a folding fan in the 1980s.

"This whole thing is super exciting for us," said Panafieu. "We put all our money and all our hopes into this project and it's amazing to see it take off."




Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.

"It Bag" | Eloise Gilles | Raphaelle de Panafieu | Paris |


Last Week News

August 11, 2010

Museum Wiesbaden Restitutes Painting by Dutch Baroque Painter Pieter de Grebber

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame to Feature Elvis 1956 Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer

Oil-Inspired Spread for August Issue of Vogue Italia Stirs Muck

Scarlett's "Gone With the Wind" Dresses in Bad Shape, Need Repairs

Sean O'Harrow Named Director of University of Iowa Museum of Art

Sotheby's Hong Kong to Offer Lots Estimated in Excess of $205 Million

Cabinet Secrets: Exhibition of Prints and Drawings at Tel Aviv Museum of Art

Alberta Artist Materializes Childhood Memory in Elaborate Installation

9/11 Museum Going Up in New York City Offers Raw Experience

Palazzo Strozzi Announces "Bronzino: Artist and Poet of the Court of the Medici"

New Exhibit by Ritsue Mishima Puts Aberdeen Art Gallery in a Spin

Bruce Museum Acquires Sculpture by Gaston Lachaise

Onassis Foundation to Hold a Major Conference on the Greek Cultural Legacy

White House Backdrop is Fine Art

Antiques Dealers Fair Limited to Launch New Boutique Fine Art and Antiques Fair in Leicestershire

Fire at Majdanek Destroys Shoes of Nazi Victims

Royal Scottish Academy Awards £21,000 to Scottish Artists

Mississippi Museum of Art Presents Art by Choice Exhibition, Sale and Auction

Falmouth Acquires Gotch Masterpiece at Record Price

August 10, 2010

Museum to Present Major Survey Devoted to Italian Artist Michelangelo Pistoletto

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame to Feature Elvis 1956 Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer

Oil-Inspired Spread for August Issue of Vogue Italia Stirs Muck

Scarlett's "Gone With the Wind" Dresses in Bad Shape, Need Repairs

Sean O'Harrow Named Director of University of Iowa Museum of Art

Sotheby's Hong Kong Autumn Sales to Offer Lots Estimated in Excess of $205 Million

Cabinet Secrets: Exhibition of Prints and Drawings at Tel Aviv Museum of Art

Scottish Government: Titian's Diana and Actaeon Draws in Crowds

Lehman Brothers Art Work to Go Under the Hammer at Christie's

Art London Returns to Chelsea this October with More than 70 Art Galleries

Julien's Auctions to Hold Historic First Pop Culture Auction in Asia

Priceless Record of Native American World on Brink of Change at Bonhams

Painting by Monet to Make a Planned Early Departure from Exhibition

Works by Three Major Northern Lights to Star in Bonhams Auction

Richard Avedon's Lively Images at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Artist Brian Borrello Creates New Print Series Using Actual BP Oil

Winner of Historic Houses Restoration Award 2010 Announced

Family Learning Centre Construction Under Way at the Art Gallery of Ontario

Mexico, Latin American Seat for Cultural Property Protection Center

Ancient Bison Kill Site Uncovered in Montana

Maine State Museum Hosts Sardine Canning Exhibit

Morse Museum Expansion Recalls Grandeur of Louis Comfort Tiffany's Personal Estate

Manhattan Mogul Elie Hirschfeld Acquires $2,000,000 Original Frank Stella Painting

August 9, 2010

Indian Show at National Gallery has Been 10 Years in Preparation Says Anish Kapoor

Scottish Government: Titian's Diana and Actaeon Draws in Crowds

Lehman Brothers Art Work to Go Under the Hammer at Christie's

Art London Returns to Chelsea this October with More than 70 Art Galleries

Julien's Auctions to Hold Historic First Pop Culture Auction in Asia

Priceless Record of Native American World on Brink of Change at Bonhams

Painting by Monet to Make a Planned Early Departure from Exhibition

Stories of War At Sea at Imperial War Museum North in Manchester

Old Masters from a Private Collection to Be Shown at Royal Picture Gallery

European Design Exhibition Coming To Milwaukee Art Museum

Hirshhorn's Black Box Space for New Media Celebrates Its Fifth Anniversary

Griffin Museum's Focus Award Recipients and Presenters Announced

Ellis Island Experience is Focus of Exhibition at Michener Art Museum

Lorenzo Dow Turner Exhibition Opens at the Anacostia Community Museum

Botanical Illustration Exhibition Highlights the Art Behind Conservation

"Myths, Religion & Ritual: Indian Art from the Koblenzer Collection" Now Open at the Allentown Art Museum

Cuban Curator Gerardo Mosquera Chosen New Curator of PhotoEspaña International Festival

Historic Royal Palaces Awards Sculpture Commission to Kendra Haste

Jen Bekman Gallery Featuirng Exhibition by Twenty-Seven Artists

Tampa Museum of Art Debuts...Musical Lines in My Hands: The Work of Dominique Labauvie

Nation's Illustration Museum Celebrates 10th Anniversary

"The Fabric of New Orleans": Two Great Local Icons, Unite to Support The Arts

Academy Art Museum Presents It;s Fifty Works from the Herbert Vogel Collection

From Wasteful to Tasteful at the Racine Art Museum

August 8, 2010

Andy Warhol Screenprints Included in Bonhams' Pioneers of Popular Culture Sale

Joslyn Art Museum Celebrates a Contemporary American Sculptor

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Showcases Works by Paul Klee

Valentino Retrospective Showing Exclusively in Brisbane

France's Most Prestigious Art Fair will Bring Together 194 Galleries of Art

Richard Misrach: After Katrina Marks Gift of Katrina Photographs Series to MFAH

Whitney Museum Extends John Jonas Gruen Exhibition

National Gallery of Victoria Celebrates the Work Artist John Davis

ICC to Present World Premiere Retrospective of Ghanaian Artist

Portland Museum Appoints New Curator of Northwest Art

Museum of Contemporary Art Presents Carrie Gundersdorf

Delaware Art Museum Presents Contemporary Ceramic Sculpture

Corning Museum of Glass Searches for Director of Curatorial Affairs

Books from the Personal Collection of Book Soup Founder Glenn Goldman on the Auction Block

Frieze Art Fair Announces Frieze Music 2010

Exhibition at the Menil Collection Features Works Never Before Displayed in the Museum

Freer Gallery's "Chinamania" Reveals Whistler's Love Affair with Blue and White

BP Saturdays: Loud Tate - Free Annual Art and Music Event at Tate Britain

August 7, 2010

New Salvador Dali Exhibition of Late Works Opens Exclusively at Atlanta's High Museum

MFA Houston Commissions Artist Cai Guo-Qiang to Create Gunpowder Drawing

Cambodia to Restore 'Killing Fields' Skull-Filled Memorial

Bertoia Auctions to Sell Toys from K-B Toys Co-Founder Collection

Whitney Announces First Major U.S. Retrospective of the Work of Paul Thek

BALTIC Announces a Major Exhibition of the Work of Anselm Kiefer

Now Reopened, Israel Museum has New Look at History of Holy Land

Guggenheim - Hugo Boss Prize Nominees Garner Accolades

10 Years On, Mystery of Confederate Submarine Remains

Rome Officials to Open Colosseum to Tourists after Dark

Dia Announces Appointment of Susan Sayre Batton as Director of Dia:Beacon

Visitors Wait in Line for Seven Hours to See Frida Kahlo Exhibition in Berlin

Contemporary Arts Center App Explores Cincinnati through Shepard Fairey Murals

Salvador Dalí Sculpture Donated to the City of Andorra

Newport Antiques Show Celebrates Fourth Year with Scrimshaw and Miniature Portraits Exhibit

48 Hours in South Dakota: Rushmore, Badlands and More

Appleton Art Center Reopens, Changes Name to The Trout Museum of Art

August 6, 2010

Diaghilev and the Golden Age of the Ballets Russes 1909-1929 to Open at the V&A

MFA Houston Commissions Artist Cai Guo-Qiang to Create Gunpowder Drawing

Cambodia to Restore 'Killing Fields' Skull-Filled Memorial

Bertoia Auctions to Sell European Toy Vehicles from K-B Toys Co-Founder Collection

Whitney Announces First Major U.S. Retrospective of the Work of Paul Thek

BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art Announces a Major Exhibition of the Work of Anselm Kiefer

Now Reopened, Israel Museum has New Look at History of Holy Land

Tate Liverpool Announces First Major Retrospective of Nam June Paik

Sotheby's Q2 Beats Wall Street on Strong Auction Sales

Guggenheim Announces "Art in France, Italy, and Germany, 1918-1936

Exhibition of Italian Prints from Mantegna to Piranesi to Open in Adelaide

Iconic Swiss Painter Albert Anker Gets Big Centenary Show

John W. Coker Announces Sale of Impressionist Treasures

King Tutankhamun's Chariot Now on View at New York Exhibition

Tabaimo to Represent Japan at the Biennale di Venezia 2011

Everson Museum Presents the Work of Gerald DiGiusto

Field Museum Scholars Find that Oxygen Fuels the Fires of Time

Three Solo Exhibitions Open at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art

Cartier-Bresson Exhibit Tells Stories in Decisive Moments

Frank Gehry's Santa Monica Place Mall Deconstructed in a Green Renovation

19th Century Topographical Artists Star at Bonhams Sale

United States Decision to Attend Hiroshima Memorial Hailed

The Anti Design Festival: Anarchy, Art and Design to Hit the Streets of London

The New School Presents Amplify: Creative and Sustainable Lifestyles in the Lower East Side

Bali Declaration Hopes to Save Indonesia's Biodiversity from Deforestation

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site