Born in 1895 in a remote fishing village in Spain, Crist bal Balenciaga
learned sewing and tailoring at his mother’s knee. By 1937, the talented
and persistent young man had opened his own design salon in Paris, and
in the years following World War II he emerged as a designer to be
reckoned with in the world of haute couture. The House of
Balenciaga grew to serve an international clientele from locations in
Paris, Madrid, and Barcelona, and from 1937 to its closing in 1968
created some of the most outstanding and innovative examples of French
and Spanish haute couture of the era.
This beautifully illustrated
book presents nearly 70 Balenciaga creations for day and evening, along
with 25 hats, from the extraordinary archives of the Texas Fashion
Collection of the University of North Texas. The book also includes
striking fashion photographs from Vogue magazine and Harper’s Bazaar
by Richard Avedon and Louise Dahl-Wolfe. A series of essays explores
many aspects of the designer’s work, among them his contributions to
fashion history; connections with such other prominent designers as
Hubert de Givenchy and Oscar de la Renta; important relationships with
Neiman Marcus and fashion buyer Bert de Winter in Dallas; and his close
friend and client Claudia Heard de Osborne.