Kawakubo’s Dover Street: An Eclectic Mix
By Miles Socha
PARIS — Trust Rei Kawakubo to build a one-stop emporium for those whose shopping lists might range from, say, a Lanvin frock and a cool CD to a chair by Hedi Slimane.
Disclosing fresh details about her forthcoming Dover Street Market complex in London, the maverick designer said she’s in final negotiations to have the likes of Alber Elbaz, Azzedine Alaïa, Raf Simons, Undercover and Olivier Theyskens of Rochas operate concessions — with the merchandise in each space still under discussion.
The six-story, 13,000-square-foot unit, slated to open in early September, promises to be the most unorthodox Comme des Garçons retail project yet, with booksellers and perhaps even a barber mingling with young designer shops and other unexpected stands. Comme des Garçons, whose sundry brands include Junya Watanabe and Comme des Garçons Shirt, is expected to occupy roughly 40 to 45 percent of the space.
Meanwhile, Kawakubo is pursuing negotiations with a wide range of creative types: jewelry maker Judy Blame; shoe designer Terry de Havilland; antique dealer Emma Hawkins; California vintage guru Cameron Silver of Decades; the hip London music purveyor Rough Trade, and photographer Nick Knight’s Showstudio.com Internet enterprise.
And in lieu of hiring architects or interior designers, Kawakubo plans to work with set designers from film and theater to add backdrops, props and drama to the mix. Already on board is Elise Capdenat, who creates scenes for avant-garde theater and dance groups in Paris.
“We didn’t want to make a normal flagship. We wanted to do something new and different,” explained Adrian Joffe, managing director of Comme des Garçons in Paris. “Rei likes the synergy that comes from creative people coming together. It’s definitely a market, but a modern version.”
In the throes of finalizing a variety of concession agreements, Joffe said some tenants may stay only a few months, others for years. “Everything is in a constant state of unfinishedness,” he said. “Even when we open, it will be an evolving project, in a constant state of flux.”
Still, Comme des Garçons hopes the concept will generate a steady stream of customers and sales. First-year sales projections are pegged at about $9.2 million, or 5 million pounds, converted from the British pound at current exchange.
To be sure, the Slimane furniture is bound to attract significant interest, and Dover Street Market has the worldwide exclusive. Under the deal, Comme des Garçons will produce and sell the furniture, with Slimane granted complete creative control over the designs and the gallery space in which they will be showcased.
Slimane recently met with Kawakubo in Tokyo to show her some illustrations and a small-scale model of one of the pieces, but other details remain under wraps. “The project with Comme des Garçons struck me immediately as interesting and natural,” he said.
As reported, Kawakubo based her London store concept loosely after the Kensington Market of the Seventies, Eighties and Nineties. She’d initially planned to rent office space to creative tenants such as graphic designers, but dispensed with that idea given the demand for retail space.
Indeed, Comme des Garçons also plans to invite stylists to mount stands selling their favorite brands and styles. Along these lines, creative director Ronnie Cooke Newhouse, of the London-based agency Studio, the ad agency for Comme des Garçons Shirt, plans to express her love for innovative footwear with a stand showcasing her favorite shoe designers.
Joffe allowed that operating such an unorthodox operation will involve “a lot of trial and error,” but he and Kawakubo feel strongly about innovation and risk.
A champion of collaboration and unusual retail formats, Kawakubo has co-designed clothes with Peggy Moffitt, muse of the late Rudi Gernreich; Vivienne Westwood, and Alaïa, to name a few. She also just opened in Singapore another “guerrilla store,” after debuting similar units in Berlin and Barcelona. As reported, guerrilla units exist for one year only in frontier retail neighborhoods with local partners and sell an eclectic mix of Comme des Garçons lines. A network of as many as 20 such stores is planned.
Kawakubo is also teaming up with trendy Paris boutique Colette to open “Colette Meets Comme des Garçons” in Tokyo, a temporary unit that will showcase product hookups between the two firms and third parties, such as Sofia Coppola/Smythson stationery.