Azzedine Alaia recently turned down one of fashion's most high-profile gigs, and now he has some choice words about two of fashion's most high-profile figures.
On Karl Lagerfeld:  "Happily, women love me and buy my clothes, unlike Karl who’s never  been loved like me! [Laughs.] . . . I don’t like his fashion, his  spirit, his attitude. It’s too much  caricature. Karl Lagerfeld  never touched a pair of scissors in his life.  That doesn’t mean that  he’s not great, but he’s part of another  system. He has capacity. One  day he does photography, the next he does  advertisements for Coca-Cola.  I would rather die than see my face in a  car advertisement. We don’t  do the same work. And I think that he is not  doing a favor to young  [designers] who might think it works that way.  They’re going to fall  before they retire."
On Anna Wintour: "I said it before. She runs the business [of Vogue]  very well, but  not the fashion part. When I see how she is dressed, I  don’t believe in  her tastes one second. I can say it loudly! She hasn’t  photographed my  work in years even if I am a best seller in the US and  I have 140  square meters at Barneys. American women love me; I don’t  need her  support at all. Anna Wintour doesn’t deal with pictures; she  is just  doing PR and business, and she scares everybody. But when she  sees me,  she is the scared one. [Laughs.] Other people think like me,  but don’t  say it because they are afraid that Vogue won’t  photograph  them. Anyway, who will remember Anna Wintour in the history  of fashion?  No one. Take Diana Vreeland, she is remembered because she  was so chic.  What she did with the magazine was great, with Avedon and  all the great  photographers. Vogue remains while its fashion editors come and go."
Source: WireImage
 
 
 
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