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June 29, 2007
Liz Claiborne anticipated a market for affordable business-like clothes that women could wear to compete with men in professional workplaces
She was a favorite of my own working mother for many years. From the New York Times: She placed practical concerns over the glamour of the catwalks and the prestige of designer prices. Her arrival as a fashion brand was well timed, catching the beginning of a great change in American society as women headed to the workplace in large numbers. She died at New York-Presbyterian Hospital from complications of cancer, said Arthur Ortenberg, her husband. Ms. Claiborne learned in 1997 that she had a rare form of cancer that affects the lining of the abdomen. While undergoing treatments, she continued to pursue a second career promoting environmental conservation. She had homes in Manhattan and the Saltaire section of Fire Island, N.Y., and on a large farm in Swan Valley, Mont. Before she became the most successful women’s apparel designer in America of the time, Ms. Claiborne had worked for 20 years in the back rooms of Seventh Avenue sportswear houses like Youth Guild and Juniorite. Strong willed with an acute business sense, she defied the male-dominated ranks of the fashion industry by starting her own company in 1976 with Mr. Ortenberg, a textiles executive who had been her boss for two years, beginning in 1954. In a reversal of roles, she gave him the corporate title of secretary. Ms. Claiborne correctly anticipated a market for affordable business-like clothes that women could wear to compete with men in professional workplaces. In her no-nonsense way, she became a role model — and her label an inspiration — to those who were looking to break through glass ceilings, as she had done. In 1986, Liz Claiborne Inc. became the first company founded by a woman to be ranked among the Fortune 500. And of the companies on that list, hers was one of only a handful with women as chief executives. When Ms. Claiborne retired from active management of the company, in 1990, it was the largest women’s apparel maker in the country, with $1.4 billion in sales... As a designer, Ms. Claiborne did not care to be considered a trendsetter. She placed practical concerns over the glamour of the catwalks and the prestige of designer prices. Her arrival as a fashion brand was well timed, catching the beginning of a great change in American society as women headed to the workplace in large numbers. She created a new foundation for a modern working woman’s wardrobe, which had begun, she once acknowledged irritably, as the bland reinterpretation for women of a man’s navy blue suit and tie. Blouses that closed with frilly bows did not appeal to Ms. Claiborne. Her creative expressions were made of colorful tailored separates that could be mixed with other pieces to create many outfits. As women made headway in corporate America, Ms. Claiborne expanded with office-friendly sportswear that conveyed a potent blend of intelligence, strength and femininity. It eventually transcended the workplace, becoming a lifestyle brand. One of her first designs was a velour peasant blouse; she sold 15,000 pieces in one season. “I wanted to dress busy and active women like myself, women who dress in a rush and who weren’t perfect,” Ms. Claiborne said in a 1989 interview in Women’s Wear Daily. “But loving clothes, I knew clothes could do a certain thing for you from a flattering point of view. And I tried to bring good taste to a mass level.” Her strategy was to provide an alternative to the expensive options facing women. Her designs, she said, were “businesslike, but not too pinstripe, more casual, more imaginative, less uptight.” The formula was an instant success. Starting with an initial investment of $50,000 in savings and $200,000 raised from friends, Liz Claiborne Inc. grossed $2.6 million in its first year. The company went public in 1981, with net income of $10 million on sales of $117 million. By its 10th anniversary, sales were over $560 million, its payroll had grown to 2,200 people and its operations included multiple showrooms at 1441 Broadway and warehouses throughout Secaucus, N.J. In 1990, the company shipped over 35 million garments and accessories. Ms. Claiborne, with her close-cropped black hair and oversize glasses, was an imposing boss to her employees and an aloof chief executive to financial analysts, presiding over design meetings with a delicate glass bell she rang to maintain order. She was a critic of the fashion industry and spoke out about a lack of opportunities for women to achieve equality in other fields. But after retiring, she and Mr. Ortenberg separated themselves from fashion almost entirely, setting off on travels to remote corners of the world in what could have been described as storybook adventures. They shared a second career by founding a charitable foundation for environmental conservation projects, among them a wildlife preserve in northeastern Tibet; rain forest education programs in Brazil; education and health projects in Kenya; and efforts to rescue elephants in Myanmar, birds in Madagascar and European brown bears in the Carpathian mountains of Romania. In Montana, where they lived part time, they bought more than 3,000 acres of farmed and overgrazed ranches with the ambition of letting the land revert to its natural state. Anne Elisabeth Jane Claiborne was born March 31, 1929, in Brussels, the daughter of Omer Villere, a banker, and Louise Carol Fenner Claiborne. As a teenager, Ms. Claiborne spent summers with family in Baltimore or New Orleans. She was a direct descendant of William C. C. Claiborne, the first governor of Louisiana. When she was 19, Ms. Claiborne, who had studied painting in Brussels and Nice but never completed high school, won a design contest advertised in Harper’s Bazaar magazine and was inspired to pursue a career in fashion. Her parents did not approve. According to Irene Daria’s book “The Fashion Cycle” (Simon & Schuster, 1990), the family was driving through Manhattan two years later when Ms. Claiborne declared, “I’m staying.” Her father let her out of the car, handed her $50 and said, “Good luck.” “It wasn’t as bad as it sounds,” Ms. Claiborne recalled at a meeting with Liz Claiborne’s current designers last year. She stayed with her grandmother for a month while looking for a job. Tina Leser eventually hired her to work at her dress house as a sketcher and fit model. Ms. Claiborne went on to work for a few other dress companies and later the Rhea Manufacturing Company, where she met her second husband, Mr. Ortenberg, in 1954. Although they were both married at the time — she to Ben Schultz, a photography agent — they began an affair and left the company because of it, Mr. Ortenberg said. “The two of us were accidents waiting to happen,” Mr. Ortenberg said. “I won her by reading aloud ‘The Little Prince.’ ” They divorced their spouses and were married in 1957. Mr. Schultz died many years ago. Jonathan Logan, another dress manufacturer, later hired Ms. Claiborne as the designer of its Youth Guild division, and she worked there for 16 years. When the label closed, she and Mr. Ortenberg started Liz Claiborne Inc., with the assumption that she was a better judge of what women wanted to wear to work. “American women are not the chicest things in the world,” Ms. Claiborne said. “They want clothes that are comfortable, young and snappy.” In addition to Mr. Ortenberg, she is survived by a son from her first marriage, Alexander G. Schultz, a jazz guitarist who lives in Germany; a brother, Omer Claiborne, a retired art dealer, of Santa Fe, N.M.; and by Mr. Ortenberg’s children from his previous marriage, Neil Ortenberg of New York and Nancy Ortenberg of Oak Park, Ill. In her fashion heyday, Ms. Claiborne became a celebrity, traveling about the country to department stores to meet her fans. Once, flying from a fashion show luncheon to a dinner show in another city, her plane was delayed. Ms. Claiborne assumed she had missed the appearance. After landing, however, she discovered that the audience was still waiting for her. “I changed in the hotel room in about two seconds flat and went out, and when I walked in that room — the applause,” she told Women’s Wear Daily in 2000. “It was the first time I realized it was like being a star for a short while. It was a great feeling, but it was a feeling also of responsibility, when you have women reacting that way and depending on you.” Correction: June 29, 2007 An obituary yesterday of the fashion designer Liz Claiborne misstated the duration of her working relationship with Arthur Ortenberg, her husband, before the founding of Liz Claiborne Inc. in 1976. Mr. Ortenberg was Ms. Claiborne’s boss for two years, beginning in 1954, not for two decades. The obituary also misidentified the object of the couple’s wildlife conservation efforts in Madagascar. Their foundation sought to rescue the “fish-eagle,” an endangered bird there; they were not trying to save fish and eagles. |
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