New Report Calls Lanvin Fracture & Alber Elbaz Ouster an 'Ugly Divorce'
EntertainmentThe New York Times has looked deeper into the shocking, unexpected ouster of beloved designer Alber Elbaz from Lanvin, and what it found is neither pretty nor elegant. Since majority shareholder Shaw-Lan Wang kicked Elbaz to the curb, employees on the creative side have been warring in the courts with its business and management side, resulting in what writer Vanessa Friedman calls “a very ugly divorce.”
Starting in 2001, Elbaz reinvented the stagnating French house “from scratch,” then-coworker Natasa Cagalj told the Times, and had evolved it into a prestige brand that was coveted among celebrities and socialites the world over. In getting to the bottom of the justification for firing Elbaz—a move that seemed fairly absurd, given his talent and popularity as a designer—Friedman finds that it mostly seemed to lie in Wang’s unwillingness to invest in Lanvin as a business. And parting so unceremoniously wasn’t unprecedented, Wang having had a similar break from Managing Director Paul Deneve after his appointment in 2006: