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Max Mara and the Origins of Italian Ready-to-Wear

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 January 2016

Nicola White*
Affiliation:
Kingston University School of Fashion, Kingston University, Surrey, KT1 2QJ, UK

Summary

This article charts the establishment and expansion of the ready-to-wear Max Mara label before the birth of the Max Mara group in 1967. Until recently, little consideration has been given to the evolution of Italian fashion, and few histories of dress or Italian culture even mention its presence before the 1970s. Still fewer acknowledge the crucial emergence of fashionable ready-to-wear in Italy in the 1960s, in which Max Mara played a key role, and which anticipated the international success of ‘Italian style’ in the 1970s and 1980s.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Association for the study of Modern Italy 

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References

1 Max Mara Statistical Records, April 1996.Google Scholar

2 Called MM. Google Scholar

3 Polan, B., ‘Maximum Effect’, You, 30 October 1994, p.51.Google Scholar

4 Apem Spa was established in 1950, in Milan, and belonged to the Rinascente Department Store Group until 1970, but cannot be classified as ‘fashionable’. It was aimed at a much lower market sector and did not offer high standards of fit, finish or style.Google Scholar

5 Achille Maramotti was interviewed by the author at the Max Mara headquarters in Reggio Emilia, on 21 July 1995. I am grateful to Professor Ian Griffiths of Kingston University for his help in arranging this interview.Google Scholar

6 E.g. Giacomoni, S., The Italian Look Reflected, Mazzotta, Milan, 1984.Google Scholar

7 Per Una Storia della Moda Pronta, CISST, Milan, 1990/ Edifir, Florence, 1991.Google Scholar

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9 These can be seen advertised in the pages of Italian high fashion magazine Bellezza from the mid-1940s.Google Scholar

10 The Pitti Palace collection is the most important and most extensive holding of historical garments in Italy. The permanent display is changed bi-annually, and correspondingly a new catalogue is published by Centro Di, Florence.Google Scholar

11 A model is the word used to describe the garment or outfit in this period, whilst a toile is a cotton reproduction of the original model, bearing the crucial details of cut and finish, but sold at a substantially lower price.Google Scholar

12 Maria Pezzi, who began work for an agency in 1936, has a unique private archive of her illustrations, and has described her role in detail in interview with the author, at her home in Milan, on 13 October 1995. The Italian couturiers bought in the form of toiles and patterns. ‘Exclusivity’, together with the right to use the Paris name, could be bought, but at ‘a very high price’. The ‘Villa’ agency, for example, negotiated a contract with Chanel, to reproduce the French fabric used in the original model, with an Italian fabric house; the exclusive trimmings and fastenings were provided directly by the Couture house.Google Scholar

13 Achille Maramotti in interview with the author.Google Scholar

14 Ibid.Google Scholar

15 Ibid.Google Scholar

16 Maramotti's comment is substantiated by surviving garments; although there are no examples of early Italian ready-to-wear held in any museum collections in Italy, corresponding examples in British museum collections, such as Brighton Municipal and the Locke Museum at Willenhall testify to a generally poor standard of fit and finish in comparison to made-to-measure.Google Scholar

17 The German ready-to-wear industry was expanding rapidly by the early 1950s; there were few Jewish tailors left, so there was little alternative, and progress in the field was swift. Nonetheless, Maramotti is certain that there was still little contact with other European ready-to-wear industries, including Germany.Google Scholar

18 This is described in a number of Italian Fashion Histories, such as Moda Italia, vol. 1, Electa, Milan, 1987, and is substantiated by the press coverage in the private archival records of journalist and economist Elisa Massai, who was Italian correspondent for the US fashion trade journal Women's Wear Daily, 1949–83.Google Scholar

19 The company is still trading successfully under this name, but is under new management, and has no records from this period.Google Scholar

20 Maramotti dates his ‘special understanding’ with Italian textiles from 1952–3.Google Scholar

21 Elisa Massai in interview with the author at her home in Milan on 19 July 1995.Google Scholar

22 Ibid.Google Scholar

23 Ginsborg, P., A History of Contemporary Italy: Society and Politics 1943–88, Penguin, London, 1990, p.159: ‘At the height of the ERP programme, Paul Hoffman, head of the ECA wrote a “country study” of Italy, criticising use of ERP funds. No overall plan had been evolved, certain areas like steel and textiles were being indiscriminately favoured.’ Although no complete study of Marshall Aid in Italy has yet been undertaken, it would appear that the funds went in a number of different directions but especially grain and coal imports and textiles. See Ellwood, D.W., L'Europa ricostruita: politica ed economia tra Stati Uniti ed Europa occidentale, 1945–1955, Il Mulino, Bologna, 1994. Elisa Massai in interview cited particular large Italian textile groups.Google Scholar

24 As an import incentive.Google Scholar

25 This is confirmed in a variety of contemporary reports in Women's Wear Daily held in the archival records of Elisa Massai.Google Scholar

26 Maramotti used woollen textiles from Loro Piana, Rivetti, Faudella, Trabaldo, Marzotto and Ferrarin, silk from Camisci, Terragni, Ones and Mantero of Como, cotton from Solbiati, and linen from French manufacturers Agache. Solbiati, today's biggest supplier, had not yet moved into production.Google Scholar

27 According to Max Mara's Director of Public Relations Giorgio Guidotti, many of the original workers are still with the company, including the fashion co-ordinator. Professor Ian Griffiths (who is also a design consultant at Max Mara), suggests that as many as 20 per cent of those employed at the Max Mara factory and the sample workrooms have been with Max Mara over 30 years, and most of these were trained at the Maramotti pattern-cutting school, which is now closed.Google Scholar

28 Pezzi, Maria interview.Google Scholar

29 Explored by the author, in relation to the British ready-to-wear industry in an undergraduate thesis entitled ‘The Commercialisation of the Paris Haute Couture Industry 1947–1965’, University of Brighton, 1986, now held by the University, and at the Musée des Beaux Arts, Paris.Google Scholar

30 Maramotti insists that he was the only Italian ready-to-wear representative who attended the Paris shows. Laura Lusuardi, (Fashion Co-ordinator and employee of Max Mara since the early 1950s) in an interview at the Max Mara factory in Reggio Emilia on 19 July 1995, recalled that they were ‘always acutely aware of stylistic developments’.Google Scholar

31 High fashion magazines, both domestic and international continued to demonstrate a strong allegiance to Paris fashion.Google Scholar

32 Maramotti interview.Google Scholar

33 Ibid.Google Scholar

34 Ibid.Google Scholar

35 Ibid.Google Scholar

36 Arianna, October 1961, pp.86–7, lists 23 retailers of Max Mara in Lombardy alone, with one in each provincial town, but four in Milan.Google Scholar

37 Laura Lusuardi interview.Google Scholar

38 Maramotti interview.Google Scholar

39 In production 1953–77, Milan.Google Scholar

40 Maramotti interview.Google Scholar

41 No exact dates have yet been established. Google Scholar

42 1959–77, Bari. Controlled by the Swedish Hettemarks family.Google Scholar

43 According to contemporary press reports in the archive of Elisa Massai.Google Scholar

44 This kind of customer orientation took a back-row seat in the fashion industry of the 1980s, as the icon-designer gained dictatorial status, and the clients' requirements became almost incidental. Yet in the economic turmoil of the 1990s, the Max Mara ‘wearability’ signature is highly fashionable. Maxima remains the business company within the group, managing over 80 direct retail outlets. There are, however, almost 200 franchised outlets, linked by computer to the head office, supplying fast market information about which designs are working and which are not. This information goes straight to the design team.Google Scholar

45 With the Italian market more or less sewn up, the target franchising markets are now overseas and the new flagship store on New York's Madison Avenue is now open. Export development is now seen as vital, however, and although 12 years ago only 18 per cent of Max Mara business was export, today the figure is nearer 35 per cent. Simultaneously, Italian clients have become very important to the US fashion press.Google Scholar

46 This is substantiated by analysis of contemporary Italian fashion magazines in the Tremelloni Library, Milan, and Maramotti confirms the interest in the case of Max Mara.Google Scholar

47 An exact foundation date has yet to be established.Google Scholar

48 The Max Mara archive reveals that in 1965 there was also a big editorial feature in Arnica, a weekly magazine published in association with the Milan newspaper Il Corriere della Sera, with a similar market to Arianna. Google Scholar

49 Giorgio Guidotti, Director of Public Relations, Max Mara, in interview with the author at Max Mara in Reggio Emilia, on 19 July 1995.Google Scholar

50 For example, Arianna, April 1963, p.46: ‘Arianna presenta in exclusiva per l'Italia la collezione Primavera-Estate 1963 della casa di confezioni Max-Mara: votando per il Referendum del colore, potrete vincere 100 abiti pronti da indossare nella taglia da voi indicata.’ Google Scholar

51 Explored in White, , ‘The Commercialisation of the Paris Haute Couture’.Google Scholar

52 Ibid.Google Scholar

53 This was just at the moment when Yves St Laurent emerged.Google Scholar

54 Max Mara has maintained this approach, and still uses consultants, alongside their full-time designers. There are a number of British faces, selected from regular talent-hunting trips to British graduation shows, and from close collaboration and sponsorship of projects at the fashion schools of Kingston University and the Royal College of Art.Google Scholar

55 In the 1966–7 period, Khan was a pioneer of the left-bank avant garde style.Google Scholar

56 Maramotti says that he is the only one who produces only his own lines. Max Mara has never made any products for a ‘designer’.Google Scholar

57 Maramotti interview.Google Scholar

58 This was the point at which Max Mara started working with ‘young’ and ‘distinctive’ Sarah Moon and other famous photographers, such as Paolo Roversi, Fabrizio Ferri, and Peter Lindbergh to create the image-making publicity campaigns which still adorn walls at the Max Mara HQ, and which established the internationally-known Max Mara style. Photographers like Moon were normally found shooting spreads for glossy fashion magazines. The notion that promotion should be of, and associated with, the highest possible creative standard became important for Max Mara from the late 1960s onwards. Nancy, Hall-Duncan in The History of Fashion Photography, Alpine, New York, 1979, pp.214–15 states that Moon ‘uses photography to portray fantasy, with a strikingly different outlook’. From the early 1970s, Moon took photographs ‘for Nova, Vogue, Marie-Claire, Harper's Bazaar and Elle’ and was the ‘prime exponent of the “impressionistic” fashion approach’, p.228. The 1995 advertising campaign was shot by Max Vadukul with the top model Christy Turlington.Google Scholar

59 Outside Italy, the UK is Max Mara's second largest market, after France. British women now spend more on Max Mara group clothes, than on any other Italian manufacturer, apart from Benetton, according to Max Mara PR Director Giorgio Guidotti. Although the Max Mara line is now the ‘deluxe’ headliner, the Marella, Marina Rinaldi, I-Blues, Sportmax, Penny Black and Weekend labels are all part of the Max Mara empire. There are 16 lines, six manufacturing companies and a distribution company, covering the womenswear market from ‘designer’ to inexpensive styling, casual, smart and outsize. There are over 260 boutiques in over 37 countries, that are either company-owned or franchised.Google Scholar

60 Maramotti's son, Luigi, 37, is a managing director and vice-president of the Max Mara group; his brother Ignazio, 33, is a managing director, and their sister Ludovica, 39, is managing director and president of Manifattura del Nord (one of the Max Mara companies).Google Scholar