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						Hubert de GIVENCHY supports his decorator friend, Janine Janet. 1956
“With the talent you have, you must feel very strong .”
950€
“With the talent you have, you must feel very strong .”
950€
Hubert de GIVENCHY (1927-2018)
Autograph letter signed to Janine Janet.
Two pages in-4°. Stamp from the Janet collection.
Without place. August 20, 1956.
Rare letter from the French designer addressed to his great friend, the artist Janine Janet, decorator for Balenciaga and the Givenchy house.
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“Dear Janine. Don't be sad and above all have confidence with the talent you have, you must feel very strong . I am sure that if you can realize your plans it will be a wonderful thing but very often it is difficult especially with these people around you. I am very happy with the trip you are making and look forward to the evening when you will tell me about the wonders you have discovered in this beautiful country. I kiss you very much. Don't forget me with Jean-Claude. See you soon. Hubert.”
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In the preface to the catalog of the exhibition entitled “Janine Janet, Métamorphoses” which was held at the Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature in 2003, Hubert de Givenchy evokes his relationship with Janine Janet and Balenciaga:
“I had the pleasure of meeting Janine Janet, thanks to Mr. Balenciaga […]. The man I have always considered my master, since our meeting in 1953, was then beginning a fruitful collaboration with the artist. Wanting to affirm the exclusive and refined character of his fashion house, Cristobal Balenciaga did not want commercial objects to be exhibited in his windows on Avenue George-V. He therefore entrusted Janine Janet with the task of installing them as he saw fit, with the sole constraint of offering a plastic equivalent to the luxury of the collections. For nearly fifteen years, Janine would deploy a wealth of imagination to renew her displays. These windows were admirable! Full of invention and fantasy. Each time they were renewed, it was a wonder. And, very often, they caused crowds to gather in front of the Balenciaga house to admire them. Where most decorators were content with ephemeral installations, Janine Janet designed veritable sculptures, requiring immense work. I particularly remember these fantasy characters, The Perfumer, The Dressmaker, and The Milliner, made with accessories corresponding to their different professions. But there were also these astonishing shell figures, these women of straw and reed, these strange busts bristling with nails, and many other creations that followed one another on Avenue George-V. In my turn, in a more modest way, I commissioned a few works from Janine. This is how she designed magnificent horses for the interior windows of my fashion house. The fruit of prodigious skill, they were entirely covered in trimmings. Another time, they were golden sphinxes, with disproportionately long necks, distant heirs of the fantasies of the 18th century. Passionate about metamorphoses, the play of transpositions that allows one material to be evoked with another, to suggest the element of an animal, vegetable or mineral kingdom by borrowing from others, she made other things for me: a rooster whose body was nothing but immense parrot tulips, or baskets of flowers with petals and corollas formed of colored stones. Finally, there were these two extraordinary busts, one in red coral and the other in jet and amethyst, which I wanted to keep in my country house. I loved watching Janine work. Her enthusiasm was surprising, tireless, she could have worked for days and nights without stopping […].