Smaller Chinese cities ‘key for luxury brands’

SHANGHAI (AFP) — Foreign luxury brands looking to win in China need to reach into cities that are barely known to the rest of the world but are home to startling and fast-growing wealth, a series of studies shows.

The majority of China’s rich now live outside of the mega-cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, said a study published 16th April by the Hurun Report.

About 825,000 people in China have net personal wealth of more than 10 million yuan (1.47 million dollars), according to the magazine, which tracks China’s wealthiest. But about 52 percent live outside the three biggest traditional centres for wealth — Beijing, Shanghai and southern Guangdong province, which includes Guangzhou and Shenzhen. “People are always shocked when they go to the sticks — to the secondary, the third tier cities — and they realise ‘My goodness these places are booming like nobody’s business’,” Hurun’s publisher Rupert Hoogewerf said. “We’re seeing very clearly there’s a trend of the luxury brands moving into the secondary cities.”

Management consultants McKinsey also warned in a separate report published this month of the dangers companies face in focusing on Beijing and Shanghai while underestimating the importance of China’s smaller cities. “In Beijing, the biggest brand names often have several retail outlets, but many go unrepresented in Chengdu or Wenzhou, even though Chengdu has more wealthy households than Detroit, and Wenzhou as many as Atlanta,” McKinsey said.

The southwestern city of Chengdu, with a population of 10 million, and eastern Wenzhou, with 7.9 million residents, are only two examples of dozens of fast-developing cities with populations of more than five million. The number of households with annual incomes of more than 250,000 yuan (36,765 dollars) hit 1.6 million last year and is expected to rise to more than four million by 2015, McKinsey said. Three quarters of the growth in China’s wealthy consumer segment will come from people who currently live outside Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong, McKinsey said.

Another recent wealth study by China Merchants Bank and consultants Bain and Company reported similar findings. More than 20,000 people who held more than 10 million yuan each in private equity were in the eastern provinces of Jiangsu and Zhejiang alone, it said. Bain’s banking study said 320,000 people across China would have more than 100,000 yuan in investable assets by the end of this year, representing a pool of nine trillion yuan in assets.

Meanwhile, consumer confidence remains unusually high among the country’s rich, with 80 percent of Chinese millionaires saying the economic crisis had not hurt their lifestyle, Hurun said, citing 67 interviews done in February.

Copyright © 2009 AFP.

China’s Rich and Super-Rich Broken down by Region

High Net Worth Indiv. with 10m yuan Ultra High Net Worth Indiv. with 100m yuan
Area* Rank No. of Indiv. No. of Indiv. /10,000 population** Rank No. of Indiv. No. of Indiv.
/100,000 population**
Beijing 1 143,000 88 1 8,800 54
Guangdong 2 137,000 14 2 7,800 8
Guangzhou 43,800 44 3,300 33
Shenzhen 40,600 47 2,760 32
Shanghai 3 116,000 62 3 7,000 38
Zhejiang 4 110,500 22 4 6,300 12
Hangzhou 42,300 54 2,280 29
Wenzhou 18,200 24 1,880 25
Ningbo 12,000 21 760 13
Jiangsu 5 59,500 8 5 3,900 5
Nanjing 19,700 27 1,470 20
Suzhou 13,900 22 820 13
Fujian 6 31,200 9 6 1,960 5
Xiamen 10,000 41 550 23
Fuzhou 9,000 13 470 7
Shandong 7 27,900 3 7 1,540 2

Qingdao

9,600 13 480 6
Liaoning 8 25,700 6 8 1,530 4
Dalian 9,900 16 620 10
Shenyang 6,900 10 450 6
Sichuan 9 21,200 3 9 1,350 2

Chengdu

12,200 11 650 6
Henan 10 14,200 2 12 950 1
Hebei 11 13,700 2 11 1,020 1
Tianjin 12 13,100 12 13 900 8
Shanxi 13 12,800 4 10 1,050 3
Hubei 14 11,500 2 14 800 1
Hunan 14 11,500 2 20 600 1
Shaanxi 16 10,200 3 16 610 2
Inner Mongolia 17 9,200 4 16 610 3
Heilongjiang 18 9,000 2 16 610 2

Harbin

5,100 5 320 3
Chongqing 19 8,900 3 21 570 2
Jiangxi 20 7,800 2 16 610 1
Anhui 21 6,700 1 15 680 1
Jilin 22 5,900 2 22 390 1
Yunnan 23 4,500 1 22 390 1
Guangxi 24 4,200 1 24 290 1
Hainan 25 2,900 3 27 120 1
Guizhou 26 2,500 1 25 220 1
Xinjiang 26 2,500 1 26 200 1
Ningxia 28 600 1 28 70 1
Gansu 28 600 0 29 60 0
Qinghai 30 400 1 30 40 1
Tibet 31 300 1 31 30 1
Total 825,000 6 51,000 4

* Excludes Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macao
** Source: 2007 National Bureau of Statistics

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Artists in luxury sculpt China’s new cultural revolution

Dior

As China sets out to rebuild its artistic heritage, support is coming from an unexpected source: the global luxury industry. The big brands have targeted China – both for exhibition displays and for collaborations with contemporary artists.

When the new 8,000 square meter, or 87,000 square foot, contemporary art and design museum is constructed next to the iconic “bird’s nest” Olympic stadium, its contents might include a portrait of Christian Dior, created in incense ash by the artist Zhang Huan.

Or, alongside the wine bottles in iron by Zheng Guogu, there may be a similar contemporary copper work re-creating Dior fragrances.

Those two objects will go on display next week as “Christian Dior & Chinese Artists” opens in an industrial space in Beijing, developed as an interior Chinese garden and displaying a capsule fashion history focusing on the founder Christian Dior and the current designer John Galliano.

Over the last two decades, there have been numerous collaborations between art and fashion. But it seems that the Chinese cannot get enough of fashion as art – and of their own artists at the epicenter of high fashion.

Two exhibitions have shown the heritage of European fashion houses to the Chinese. In March, Ferragamo held its 80th birthday celebrations in Shanghai, with an exhibition of Salvatore Ferragamo at the Museum of Contemporary Art; and with a fashion show staged at the new Shanghai Port International Cruise Terminal.

“The ‘Evolving Legend’ exhibition was inaugurated in Shanghai to celebrate the anniversary and our 15 years relationship with China,” said Michele Norsa, CEO of Ferragamo. He says that after the exhibition of the Florentine shoemaker’s work moved on to Milan’s Triennale, where it closed last week, there are now plans to take the show elsewhere in  Asia.

Ferragamo established itself in Asia in the early 1970s and its first Chinese art collaborations go back to 1992, when an exhibition of 11 Chinese artists in different disciplines was held in its New York store, along with a sponsorship of a Chinese video art and photography exhibition at the International Center of Photography in New York.

MaxMara, another Italian design house, opened its traveling exhibition “Coats” last month at the Namoc Museum in Beijing with a fashion show and a dinner at the Tai Miao temple that was attended by internationally known Chinese celebrities. They included the actress Maggie Cheung, famous for the movie “In the Mood for Love,” and Guo Jingjing, a gold-medal-winning diver at the Beijing Olympics.

Louis Vuitton, whose roots in China go back to 1979, has seen its artistic collaborations flower. As well as sponsoring a Sovereign Asia Art Prize in 2007, Vuitton brought art this year to its two Hong Kong stores, with Zhan Wang creating a steel sculpture in the Central district, and the shop in the Tsim Sha Tsui area across Victoria Harbor displaying work from the famous Chinese actor and photographer Chow Yun Fat.

Earlier this year, Vuitton held in its Champs-Elysées flagship store in Paris an exhibition inspired by André Citroën’s epic journey down the “Silk Road” in 1931, including Chinese video artists and photographers.

For next week’s exhibition, Sidney Toledano, CEO of Dior, was determined to do more than sponsor an art show.

“It’s not about branding and marketing – it is about having a cultural impact,” Toledano says. “We could just have supported the artists, but the idea was to let them work a Dior theme, to see how they looked at Monsieur Dior himself and the Dior universe. When I saw the finished works, done over three months, I was impressed by their creativity. It was almost like watching a couture collection develop.”

The 21 artists whose works go on display from Nov. 16 at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing include some of China’s edgiest artists. Their work, as seen currently at the new Charles Saatchi Gallery in London, might raise a few eyebrows in a dialogue between art and fashion.

Zhang Huan’s personal and politicized sculptures and ash paintings will face off with the personage of Christian Dior; while Li Songsong is exchanging three paintings – of Boccaccio’s “The Decameron,” of the National People’s Congress and of the crumpled wings of a fallen airplane – for the ultimate fashion statement: a giant Lady Dior bag in neon lights.

It seems unlikely that Liu Wei’s sculpture of a turd will be redeveloped for Dior. But the hollow, robotic eyes of Zhang Xiaogang’s paintings will be viewed in a vision of Dior Homme, designed by Kris Van Assche; and Liu Wei’s extraordinary effects with dog chewings will be applied to Dior’s “Cocotte” dress.

Pearl Lam, the director of the Contrasts Gallery of Chinese contemporary art which opened in Hong Kong in 1992 and later in Shanghai and Beijing, says that the line between art and commerce has never been drawn in China, because traditionally “artists” and their work were not defined. Known as “literati,” they might paint, write calligraphy, compose poetry, literature and music, while at the same time designing with craftsmen anything from teapots to houses.

“In ancient times in China, art was not created for selling – only for self-cultivation,” says Lam, explaining that the artworks were given away to those who had been appreciative and the literati’s highest standing was to be qualified to join the imperial court.

Cut to the 21st century, and commercialism and consumerism have inevitably entered the equation, with the catalyst in the Japanese artist Takashi Murakami and his collaborations with Louis Vuitton.

“When a Chinese artist, like Zhang Huan, accepts a commission from Dior to create works about Dior, he is in fact pushing the boundaries to react to the Chinese traditional values of art and to question: what is art in the context of China’s 21st century,” says Lam, who claims that all artists understand the power of marketing by fashion houses and know that through fashion exposure, the artist’s name might become a brand.

It might sound like a collaboration between two hungry groups – the Chinese dignitaries, eager to find the home-grown art to fill a new architectural wonder; and Western brands trying to create a name and good will in China. But if commerce encourages art, whatever the motive, it seems a positive step. And with the Chinese, even in tough economic times, acting as suppliers of products to the world, is it surprising that the country’s art has become a marketable commodity?

By Suzy Menkes, International Herald Tribune

Wuyong: Paris anti-luxury Haute Couture

WUYONG Cover

WUYONG Cover

Make useless things into useful, statement of anti-fashion shown on the last day of Haute Couture week, Chinese designer MA Ke staged on again in the green gardens of Palais Royal with her paradoxical concepts.

Theme: “Luxurious Qing Pin 奢侈的清贫”, which explains an immaterial statement of ancestral spirit.

Scene: One alley of the city’s Palais Royal gardens transformed into a fashion production chain straight out of rural China. The line went from boxes of cotton seed, to weavers and dyers, with people actually spinning and working looms, and on and on until the final product, modeled by a group “dancers” more like choreographic performance than a fashion show before departing in a single file.

Soundtrack: a wailing voice accompanied with water flow from time to time for half an hour from NA Ren, a Mongolian singner as well as the role of dyer on the scene.

Top models: from youth to grizzled middle aged, no frontier men and women.

The result, homespun loose fitting trousers, gathered skirts and big shirts, made up of naturally dyed and hand-woven pieces resembling functional earth tone garb worn by Chinese peasants, worked as a moment of far-flung fashion poetry.

To cloture the Paris Haute Couture week, MA Ke and her under-design “WUYONG” are obviously contrary to the rest of lavish and extravagance runways.

Buoyed by the success of her “Exception de Mixmind” label, which is sold in around 50 boutiques across China, she has launched her couture line, from 2006, “Wuyong” (which means “useless” in Chinese.) with her first exhibition last year on the Paris fashion week.

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