“Remarkable” ―Hamish Bowles, Vogue
The overdue restoration of Catherine Dior's
extraordinary life, from her brother's muse to Holocaust survivor
When the
French designer Christian Dior presented his first collection in Paris in 1947,
he changed fashion forever. Dior’s “New Look” created a striking, romantic
vision of femininity, luxury, and grace, making him―and his last name―famous
overnight. One woman informed Dior’s vision more than any other: his sister,
Catherine, a Resistance fighter, concentration camp survivor, and cultivator of
rose gardens who inspired Dior’s most beloved fragrance, Miss Dior. Yet the
story of Catherine’s remarkable life―so different from her famous brother’s―has
never been told, until now.
Drawing on
the Dior archives and extensive research, Justine Picardie’s Miss Dior is the
long-overdue restoration of Catherine Dior’s life. The siblings’ stories are
profoundly intertwined: in Occupied France, as Christian honed his couture
skills, Catherine dedicated herself to the Resistance, ultimately being
captured by the Gestapo and sent to Ravensbruck, the only Nazi camp solely for
women. Seeking to trace Catherine’s story as well as her influence on her
brother, Picardie traveled to the significant places of Catherine’s life,
including Les Rhumbs, the Dior family villa with its magnificent gardens; the
House of Dior in Paris; and La Colle Noire, Christian’s chateâu that he
bequeathed to his sister.
Inventive
and captivating, and shaped by Picardie’s own journey, Miss Dior examines the
legacy of Christian Dior, the secrets of postwar France, and the unbreakable
bond between two remarkable siblings. Most important, it shines overdue
recognition on a previously overlooked life, one that epitomized courage and
also embodied the astonishing capacity of the human spirit to remain undimmed,
even in the darkest circumstances.
Miss Dior by Justine Picardie review – fashion
meets the French Resistance
Christian Dior’s younger sister is a largely ghostly
presence in this nonetheless enjoyable book about the courageous Nazi-fighting
florist
Rachel
Cooke
@msrachelcooke
Tue 21 Sep
2021 07.00 BST
Postwar
Europe is eternally fascinating: the sheer disjunction between past and
present. “I will not disguise the fact that the Beistegui ball is a memory that
I am proud to possess,” wrote Christian Dior of a more than usually lavish
party he attended in Venice in 1951. “Europe was tired of dropping bombs and
now only wanted to let off fireworks… It was reassuring to find that the coarse
feasts of the black marketeers were being gradually superseded by the more
elegant entertainments of smart society.” The designer, however, arrived at
this gathering dressed as a phantom in a long white robe and a black mask. If
the party was wildly immoderate, he was a vision of daring minimalism.
But perhaps
ghosts were on his mind. Until 1949, after all, he’d had been living with a
phantom of sorts, in the form of his younger sister, Catherine. A member of the
Resistance, Catherine had been arrested in July 1944, brutally tortured, and
deported to Ravensbrück concentration camp. When she arrived back in Paris in
May 1945, having escaped a death march, she was so emaciated, her brother
didn’t recognise her; she was too sick to eat the celebratory dinner he’d
prepared for her. She was a spectral presence – and, to a degree, would always
be so. So much would remain unsaid. For the rest of her life, Catherine never
spoke of what she’d endured: the horrors that “on ne put pas nommer”.
While her
extreme bravery during the war is not in doubt, there’s little for Picardie to
go on even in that period
Dior, who’d
worked for the couturier Lucien Lelong during the war, showed his debut
collection at 30 Avenue Montaigne, Paris, on 12 February 1947 (the “new look”,
as it was christened by Carmel Snow, the editor of American Harper’s Bazaar).
His sister was in the audience, breathing air that was heady with scent, as
well as covetousness: his models wore the soon-to-be-launched Miss Dior, its
formula inspired by the jasmine and roses Catherine adored (she was by now
working as a florist). But as her biographer Justine Picardie admits, she would
only ever be an “intangible presence” at the house. Later, there would be a
dress, also called Miss Dior: a gown covered in hand-stitched petals.
Catherine, though, was not a fancy dresser. In photographs, she is ever
practical-looking. Her clothes are chosen for warmth and ease, not for drawing
the eye.
One thinks
of Paul Thomas Anderson’s Phantom Thread, in which Daniel Day-Lewis plays a
couturier and Lesley Manville his devoted sister. If Catherine’s role in Dior’s
life had been similar, this book would have fallen more easily into place – and
sometimes, you can sense Picardie’s wistfulness on this score. This, though, was
not the case, and while her extreme bravery during the war is not in doubt,
there’s little for Picardie to go on even in that period: no diaries, no
letters, few eyewitness accounts. To bring this part of her life alive, she
must rely on the experiences of other Resistance fighters, the work of other
historians. Though Catherine testified at the 1952 trial for war crimes of
those who’d tortured her – “I know what I am saying,” she shouted at the judge,
when it was suggested that she had misidentified one of them – she remains a
shadow. For pages at a time, there’s no mention of her at all.
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