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Anna Sui

Anna Sui (Chinese: 蕭志美; pinyin: Xiāo Zhìměi; born August 4, 1964)[10][11] is an American fashion designer. She was named one of the "Top 5 Fashion Icons of the Decade",[12] and in 2009 earned the Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA), joining the ranks of Yves Saint Laurent, Giorgio Armani, Ralph Lauren, and Diane von Furstenberg.[13] Her brand categories include several fashion lines, footwear, cosmetics, fragrances, eyewear, jewelry, accessories and home goods[14][15]

Anna Sui

(1964-08-04) August 4, 1964

Detroit, Michigan, U.S.

Fashion designer

  • Anna Sui
  • Dolly Girl by Anna Sui[1]
  • Anna Sui Mini[2]
  • Anna Sui Vision[3]
  • The Souvenir Shop Anna Sui[4]

CFDA Perry Ellis New Talent Award
Time – Top 5 Fashion Icons of the Decade[5]
CFDA Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award[6]
Bravo A-List Award[7]
Classic Icon of Fashion and Design
Identities – Leadership in the Arts Award[8]
2017 Honorary Doctorate Recipient, The New School[9]

萧志美

Xiāo Zhìměi

Xiāo Zhìměi

Hsiao1 Chih4-Mei3

アナスイ

Anasui

Anasui

Early life and family origins[edit]

Sui is a second-generation Chinese-American born in Detroit, Michigan. Her father, Paul Sui (Chinese: 蕭惠光; pinyin: Xiāo Huìguāng) and mother, Grace Sui Fang (方光琪; Fāng Guāngqí) met while studying at the Sorbonne in Paris where Sui's father was studying engineering and her mother, painting.[16] Her paternal grandparents were Xiao Yulan (蕭毓蘭; Xiāo Yùlán), a Tahitian-Chinese businessman, and his wife Qiu Daidi (丘帶娣; Qiū Dàidì).[17][18] Her maternal grandparents were Fang Chih, a Chinese diplomat and his Japanese wife named Fang I-chih (born Masue Ueki).[19][20][21]


Sui is a matrilineal descendant of the prominent Fang clan of Tongcheng, Anhui, notable for its many scholars and philosophers.[22] She is an 18th generation descendant of Fang Bao, an influential Chinese poet who founded the Tongcheng School of literary prose popular throughout the Qing Empire.[23] Notable ancestors also include Fang Gongcheng, tutor of the imperial palace, and Fang Guancheng, Viceroy of Zhili seated at Tianjin from 1749 to 1768 amongst other Qing era scholars.[24][25] Her niece is actress and model Chase Sui Wonders.[26]


By the time she was four years old, Sui knew she wanted to be a fashion designer.[8][27] Sui's mother taught her about putting together a wardrobe, bringing a young Sui with her to shop for fabrics. Sui would spend hours watching her mother sew and would collect the fabric scraps to clothe her Barbie dolls and her brothers' army action figures. Through this process, Sui learned the basics of making clothing and soon she was putting together her own outfits. This was accomplished by buying pattern pieces for the sleeves of a dress, and swapping them to match other dresses, to create her own look for the garments.[8]


As a teen, she read an article [28] in Life magazine about the achievements of Mia Fonssagrives-Solow and Vicky Tiel who graduated from Parsons School of Design in New York City and then moved to Paris, where Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton opened a boutique with the girls. Sui credits reading this article as a pivotal moment in her youth, which gave her clear direction on her goals for her future.[29]

Early career[edit]

Sui moved to New York and attended Parsons, but after finishing her second year, [30] Sui was hired in 1975 by Erica Elias' juniors clothing label Charlie's Girls,[31] where she learned by designing for sportswear labels and doing styling on the photography shoots of friend and former Parsons' classmate Steven Meisel.[32] Sui's work as a stylist for Meisel's shoots featured in the Italian magazine Lei specifically were very well received.[16] After the closing of Charlie's Girls, Sui worked for several other sportswear designers including Bobbie Brooks and Simultanee.[8][16]


During this time, she began designing and making clothes out of her apartment.[33] Sui stated that she was inspired to branch out on her own by a desire to dress rock stars and people who attended their concerts.[34] Indeed, during this period, the majority of her personal business was focused on targeting sales to music stores.[16] While working for the sportswear company Glenora, she brought her collection of five pieces to a New York trade show, and caught the attention of New York department stores Bloomingdale's and Macy's.[8]


A few weeks later, in August 1979, those clothes were featured in a full-page Macy's ad in the Sunday edition of The New York Times.[35] The manager at Glenora, where Sui was still on the payroll, was furious when he saw the advertisement in the Times and fired her on the spot. Left without a job, Sui took her $300 in savings and started a business out of a little corner of the living room in her apartment.[36] For several years Sui ran the company out of her apartment, doing odd-jobs for spare income and reinvesting every penny of earnings into her business.

Retail presence[edit]

The designer opened her first retail location in 1992[43] at 113 Greene Street in New York City's Soho District. The flagship store was known for its red floors, antique black furniture, signature dolly head mannequins and its purple walls which Sui painted herself.[50]


In 1993, the Anna Sui Corporation opened a store in Hollywood at La Brea Avenue expanding coverage and controlling North American distribution.[51] The same year, Sui introduced menswear into her runway collections with Mick Jagger later appearing on Saturday Night Live in one of the designer's suits.[52] Later, in June 2015, Sui relocated her Soho flagship store to 424 Broome Street from its previous 23 year long location on Greene Street.[50][53] The store moved out of the Broome Street space in late 2020.

Specialized collaborations[edit]

In April 2004, the designer entered a collaboration with Dark Horse Comics and William Tucci designing the wardrobe for several of the main characters in Tucci's Shi: Ju-Nen,[59] a miniseries in the hit comic Shi. Sui took the wardrobes from her Fall 2004 fashion collection, with items including yukata kimono minidresses and purple hose and high-heels.[60][61] In October, Sui partnered with Gonzo K.K. Studios to design costumes for the characters in their 2004 television series Gankutsuou: The Count of Monte Cristo, a series loosely based on The Count of Monte Cristo by French author Alexandre Dumas.[62]


In 2005, Sui was contracted by Samsung Electronics Co. in partnership with Vogue to design a Samsung SGH-E315 cell phone.[63] The limited edition handset which was available through T-Mobile sold out in the first month with products occasionally coming for sale on eBay.[64][65][66] Sui also partnered with Anthropologie to launch a fashion collection called Anna Sui for Anthropologie.[67][68] The same year, Sui also entered into a 2-year deal with Victoria's Secret designing a lingerie line for the company.[8]


In 2006, Anna Sui launched a limited edition Anna Sui Boho Barbie doll in partnership with Mattel. She later launched a limited edition collection with Victoria's Secret called Anna Sui for Victoria's Secret.[43]


For the Hello Kitty 30th Anniversary in 2007, Sui partnered with the Japanese company to create a limited edition collection in tribute to the milestone. The stuffed animals from this collection sell for over US$100.00 on eBay.[69] In November 2007, Sui followed up on the success of her US cell phone collaboration with the launch of the Dolly Girl by Anna Sui model fanfun. 815T cell phone in collaboration with Softbank Mobile which was distributed online in Japan.[70]


In 2008, Sui launched the Dolly Girl clothing collection in Japan to follow-up on her previous fragrance lines. Later in 2008, Sui partnered with Nissan to design a customized car, the Nissan 350z Anna Sui Limited Edition which was featured at various roadshows.


In 2011, Sui collaborated with Google to create a themed Google Chrome web browser extension.[71]


In November 2012, Sui and Albion partnered with UK online seller ASOS to launch a Fall/Winter 2013 Anna Sui Cosmetics line in Europe. The series featured a collaboration with Disney.[72]


In April 2014, Sui returned to her native Detroit to partner with the Ford Motor Company in creating the Mustang Unleashed Collection celebrating the 50 year anniversary of the Ford Mustang.[73] Later in April, Sui and Hong Kong based I.T. Apparels Ltd partnered with Lab Made, a Hong Kong ice cream vendor famous for pioneering the obscure market of liquid nitrogen ice cream to create an Anna Sui × Lab Made pop-up store which was featured at the company's Tsimshatsui branch throughout April 2014. The collaboration also featured Sui's own flavor of purple ice cream and the opening was announced by Hong Kong celebrity Alfred Hui, a contract artist for Hong Kong's Television Broadcasts Limited.[74] In July, Sui launched a lingerie line in Korea with Alvin Korea Co. Ltd. which was launched with a full scale lingerie fashion show at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Seoul.[75] In October, Sui partnered with the CFDA to launch a collaboration with Best Buy called Anna Sui × Best Buy as a part of their designer's series.[76]


In March 2015, Sui and Isetan partnered with Sailor Moon to launch the Sailor Moon × Anna Sui collection which was featured at the Isetan store in Shinjuku.[77][78] Sui also partnered with French dessert maker Ladurée to create a collaboration called Anna Sui × Ladurée as a part of the Les Merveilleuses Ladurée collection.[79][80]


In November 2015, the Starbucks × Anna Sui collection was announced, a holiday collaboration between the coffeehouse chain and the fashion designer.[81][82]


In August 2016, the 20th anniversary of Sui's entry into the Japanese market, Anna Sui Japan launched Anna Sui Mag, an online Japanese language magazine and lifestyle blog.[83] For Singapore's Golden Jubilee, Sui partnered with Uniform and Shentonista to create a commemorative SG50 tote featured in a blog series by Shentonista.[84]


In January 2017, Sui collaborated with Kenner/Takara to launch Blythe Adores Anna doll collection.[85] The collection released in Japan with a further 500 dolls being further released via international lottery.[86][87] In 2019, as part of Barbie's 60th anniversary, 4 limited sets of dolls with outfits from Sui's Spring 2019 collection were released.[88]

Recognition[edit]

In 1992, Sui won the CFDA Perry Ellis award for new talent.[8]


In 2009, Sui was presented with the Classic Icon of Fashion Design award at the China Fashion Awards in Beijing and with the CFDA's Geoffrey Beene Lifetime Achievement Award in her native New York City.[105][106]


In 2010, Sui collaborated with Andrew Bolton to publish a book chronicling her 20-year career.[107] Later in the year, she launched her Forbidden Affair fragrance.


In April, Sui attended the Identities 2011 fashion show at Harvard College where she spoke to the students and was honored with the program's Leadership of the Arts Award.[108]


From May to November 2013, clothing from Sui's 1999 and 2000 collections were featured at the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology as a part of their RetroSpective: Fashion & Textile History Gallery exhibition.[109]


In June 2016, a historical retrospective of Sui's designs displayed at the Beijing SKP department store. The collection featured Anna Sui designed items and outfits dating from Sui's first show in 1991 through her 2016 collections.[110][111]


In May 2017, London's Fashion and Textile Museum debuted an Anna Sui exhibition titled The World of Anna Sui. The exhibition marks the first ever museum retrospective in the United Kingdom featuring an American fashion designer and the first time Sui has been the sole subject of a museum exposition.[112][113] The exhibition announcement coincided with the announcement of a new book on Sui's career by The Business of Fashion's Editor-at-Large, Tim Blanks.[15] The Anna Sui X INC International Concepts collection for Macy's was announced for September 2017 featuring model Karen Elson.[114]


In 2018, Sui received the Women's Entrepreneurship Day Pioneer Award[115] at the United Nations in recognition for her achievements in fashion.[116]

(May 1, 2013). Anna Sui. New York: Infobase Publishing. ISBN 9781438144917 – via Google Books.

Muaddi Darraj, Susan

(May 7, 2013). Sui, Anna; White, Jack; Meisel, Steven (eds.). Anna Sui. New York: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-1452128597 – via Google Books.

Bolton, Andrew

(May 30, 2017). The World of Anna Sui. New York: Abrahams. ISBN 978-1-4197-2418-3 – via Google Books.

Blanks, Tim

Mudd Club

Parsons The New School for Design

Steven Meisel

Naomi Campbell

Linda Evangelista

Sofia Coppola

Darrai, Susan Muaddi (2013). . New York City: Infobase Learning. ISBN 978-1438144917 – via Google Books.

Anna Sui: Asian Americans of Achievement

(2013). Anna Sui. New York: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-1452128597 – via Google Books.

Bolton, Andrew

Padilha, Roger; Padilha, Mauricio (2012). . New York: Random House Incorporated. ISBN 978-0847837922.

Antonio Lopez: Fashion, Art, Sex & Disco

Calahan, April (2015). . New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 440. ISBN 978-0300212266.

Fashion Plates: 150 Years of Style

Kellogg, Ann T. (2002). . Westport: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0313312206.

In an Influential Fashion: An Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-and Twentieth-century Fashion Designers and Retailers who Transformed Dress

; Cutler, E. P. (2014). Pantone on Fashion: A Century of Color in Design. New York: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-1452130521.

Eiseman, Leatrice

Tuite, Rebecca (2016), , National Women's History Museum

Defining Designs

Official website

Quotations related to Anna Sui at Wikiquote