British designer Kim Jones is to quit Louis Vuitton after he shows his final men's collection for the label on Thursday, the brand said yesterday. His departure from one of the plum jobs in men's fashion is likely to set off a fresh round of musical chairs, with speculation mounting that he may be on his way to Versace. The 38-year-old has led the luxury French brand since 2011 after he was poached from British heritage house Dunhill, which he dusted down and gave a new lease of life. Vuitton said that Jones "has been the driving force behind some of the house's most successful projects and collaborations", with eye-catching hook-ups with hip New York streetwear brand Supreme and the iconoclastic British artists Jake and Dinos Chapman.
Jones brought his passion for wildlife and for exotic travel to his ultra-luxurious collections for Vuitton, mixing a lingering nostalgia for British colonial chic with a streetwise edge. Vuitton's chairman Michael Burke praised Jones' ability to "set trends" and for making the label "the leading brand in luxury menswear today. "All of us who have been fortunate to work with Kim wish him continued success in his next venture," he added in a statement.
Move to Versace?
Women's Wear Daily, the fashion industry bible, had reported that the designer was in talks with Versace in September, but the Italian brand would not comment on the rumors. WWD praised the Briton in September as one of the "small clutch of marquee designers who can straddle the luxury and streetwear worlds, which is why Versace might have come knocking." Jones could also be a contender for the British brand Burberry which has been looking for a creative director to replace Christopher Bailey, who is leaving in March.
The creator, who had a globetrotting childhood that took in Africa and the Amazon, said in November that he planned to retire in five years, or at least by the time he was 45. "I would like to do something else. Life doesn't have to be one thing," he told GQ magazine, "I would like to do conservation." Jones who was talent-spotted by designer John Galliano while he was still a student in London. Indeed Galliano, then at Dior, bought his graduate collection from the prestigious Central Saint Martins fashion school. He later became a close friend of Alexander McQueen, who killed himself in 2010, who he regarded "as an older brother".-AFP