Alessandro Michele

Fashion designer

Birthday November 25, 1972

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Rome, Italy

Age 51 years old

Nationality Italy

#39803 Most Popular

1922

He reused the "My Body My Choice" slogan, the embroidered uterus design, and the "22.05.1978" date (the date on which abortion became protected by Italian courts), transforming the brand into a postgender proposition.

He added a dramatic Renaissance component to Gucci’s spirit, replaced the modernist furniture of the Palazzo Alberini-Cicciaporci (Gucci’s design headquarters in Rome) with antiques, and chose buildings of historic significance for his theatrical shows.

1972

Alessandro Michele (born 25 November 1972) is an Italian fashion designer who most recently served as the creative director of Gucci, the Italian fashion luxury house where he had been working since 2002.

Known for his maximalist designs, Alessandro Michele revived Gucci's popularity, most notably with a Geek-Chic aesthetic.

1990

In the early 1990s, Alessandro Michele completed his studies of fashion design at the Accademia di Costume e di Moda in Rome, where he learned to design both theatrical costumes and fashion wear.

1994

In 1994, Alessandro Michele left Rome to work in Les Copains, an Italian knitwear firm based in Bologna.

Three years later, he joined Silvia Venturini Fendi and Karl Lagerfeld at luxury house Fendi.

He worked with Frida Giannini and was appointed senior accessories designer, in charge of the brand’s leather goods.

2002

In 2002, Tom Ford, Gucci's creative director from 1994 to 2004, invited Alessandro Michele to work at the firm's London-based design office.

He was originally in charge of the company’s handbag designs.

2006

In 2006, Alessandro Michele was named senior designer of Gucci leather goods, and in 2011, he was promoted associate creative director to Frida Giannini, creative director of Gucci since 2005.

2014

In 2014, the Italian designer also became creative director of Richard Ginori, the Florentine porcelain brand acquired by Gucci in June 2013.

2015

He had been responsible for all of Gucci's collections and global brand image from January 2015 until he stepped down from the role in November 2022.

Alessandro Michele grew up in Rome.

His father was an Alitalia technician, and his mother an assistant to a movie executive.

In January 2015, Marco Bizzarri asked Alessandro Michele to act as interim creative designer for the January menswear show, giving him a week to reshape Frida Giannini's original designs.

Michele accepted the challenge and introduced a “new Gucci: nonconformist, romantic, intellectual”.

Two days later, Kering appointed Alessandro Michele creative director of Gucci, with the goal to reinvent Gucci’s props amid deflating sales.

A month later, Michele introduced a "sophisticated, intellectual and androgynous feel" for Gucci during his first women's collection show.

While creating iconic products, such as the Dionysus handbag, Alessandro Michele also reintroduced Gucci classics including the double-G logo.

He moved away from Tom Ford's "Sexy Gucci" props and feminized Gucci’s menswear ("you can be more masculine showing your femininity").

2016

In 2016, for the Gucci Museum in Florence, Alessandro Michele curated two additional rooms dedicated to Tom Ford's collections.

2018

Since the 2018 opening of the Gucci Wooster Bookstore in New York, Michele seasonally contributes to the curation of the shop’s items.

In October 2018, he co-curated with Maurizio Cattelan the 2-month Gucci art exhibition "The Artist is Present" in Shanghai.

2019

In 2019, Alessandro Michele revived Gucci's Beauty collection, and Gucci launched its first fine jewelry collection, which he designed.

Alessandro Michele’s father was also an avid artist who often took his son out to the museums.

His family encouraged his interest in fashion at an early age.

As a teenager, he read British magazines and was a fan of London’s post-punk and New Romantic street style.

His designs have been described as eclectic, flamboyant and maximalist, almost psychedelic, and drawn from several influences that span from cinema and theatrics to post-punk, crochet and glamour.

Alessandro Michele refers to himself as an art archaeologist - historicist of garments - rather than a creative director, considering that clothes are meaningless without a historic context.

In his fashion Renaissance process, he explores how adornment and embellishment was used over the centuries, bringing a kaleidoscopic mix of times and cultures that resonates with Gilles Deleuze's idea of "assemblage".

Michele is openly gay.

He lives in Rome with his longtime partner, professor of urban planning, Giovanni Attili.