Marcus Wainwright on going solo at Rag & Bone, spirituality and Instagram – Evening Standard

All exposed brickwork and piping, on first impression Marcus Wainwrights office might seem just like any other Meatpacking District loft. Look a bit closer, though, and you soon start to see the spoils of 15 very successful years spent in fashion. There are framed letters of congratulations from former President Barack Obama, from American Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and from Ralph Lauren. There is a handwritten card in which Cate Blanchett gushes that she is such a devotee. On the floor, among stacks and stacks of books (to be honest its a bit of a tip), is the Royal typewriter that provided Wainwrights label, Rag & Bone, with its signature lowercase font.

Wainwright himself is sitting behind his heavyset dark wood desk having his photo taken. Until last year, there was another desk just like his in here, and these photos would also have featured another man his business partner David Neville, a fellow Brit who he first met aged 14 at Wellington College (a boarding school near Reading), and who joined the company in 2005 as co-director. But although Neville still retains his shares and seat on the board, in mid-2016 he left the building to invest in other ventures (including one with his wife, renowned make-up artist Gucci Westman, who is launching her own skincare line).

Thus Wainwright has now taken on the commercial side of Rag & Bone as well as the creative, heading up a team of 300 and a global empire of 36 stores. He is now both the creative director and sole CEO of a brand that reportedly generated more than $300m (235m) in revenue last year, and which is still growing all the time. Witness the huge new flagship store that has opened this week on the corner of Beak Street and Great Pulteney Street in Soho: a five-storey late-Victorian building that will serve as its European HQ, and in which Wainwrights friend Stanley Donwood the British artist best known for creating Radioheads album covers has painted a vast black and white London skyline mural.

Its a bit of a headf***, he admits when asked how hes coping day to day with overseeing such big steps alone. He used to run the business side of things, I always used to run the creative side of things. Now I have to run everything. That took a bit of getting used to. Im getting the hang of it I think, although I still cant really read a spreadsheet. Why did the band split up? It was the end of an era. We achieved a lot together and it was just one of those things, Wainwright shrugs. David decided that he wanted to go off and do some other stuff and I felt like I could take Rag & Bone in a singular direction. To illustrate the duality of his new position, there is a drawing table off to one side lined up with his sketchbooks containing years of ideas, designs and doodlings, some of which have been embellished in places by his kids. So Wainwright can literally roll between the two roles on his swivel chair.

The nonchalant air of artful dishevelment about Wainwright and his workspace is very much the pervading Rag & Bone aesthetic. Born in Greece before moving to Bangladesh and Switzerland with his diplomat parents, he had no formal training as a fashion designer but grew up with an appreciation for bespoke tailoring. From the age of 16, his grandmother would pay for him to have a suit made each year for his birthday. Later he spent more than a year in a denim factory in Kentucky learning the rudiments from lifelong artisans before the place went out of business. All this is weaved into Rag & Bones various lines: ready-to-wear womens, mens, jeans, shoes, accessories. We ended up with a lot of American workwear with English tailoring details; general construction points that are taken from English cues and applied to American clothes.

It was love that originally brought Wainwright to America. He had quit a lucrative but soul-destroying telecoms job in London, rented out his flat in Stockwell and gone backpacking to Mexico where he met his now wife, Glenna Neece, who was working there as a model. He followed her back to New York. Today they live in a $6.75m (5.3m) house in Cobble Hill Historic District, a family-friendly part of brownstone Brooklyn, with their three kids, Noah, 10, Henry, eight, and Cate, five, who are all at a local private school. Neece is now a herbalist who practises reiki. Is he into all that too? Not per se, but I drink what she gives me, he says. And Im getting spiritual in my old age. I meditate.

To complete the idyll, the family also has a weekend retreat in the Hamptons: a converted barn with a pool in Bridgehampton. I have a Land Rover that I drive on the beach, which I love, he says. We used to go every weekend until my kids starting playing sport. Weekend soccer kills you! Just recently, however, Wainwright enjoyed a rare weekend. I took time for myself, he says. He went to Seattle for a business meeting and then stayed on his own. I just drew, walked around, ate sushi, drank beer. Then I went to a Radiohead concert. Hes friends with the band. I get to go and sit in the dressing room, so its pretty fun.

For someone who claims to not be a social guy, Wainwright certainly rubs shoulders with an interesting set of creative types with whom he collaborates on various projects. Hes made short conceptual films using parkour or interpretive dance and held portrait photo exhibitions in place of runway shows. His latest enterprise was to fund a quirky short film called Hair, which debuted at Robert De Niros Tribeca Film Festival in April a five-minute two-hander set in a Williamsburg barbershop between Hollywood actors Bobby Cannavale (Vinyl) and John Turturro (The Night Of). The entire wardrobe is Rag & Bone. It was completely ad-libbed, there was no script and they could wear whatever they wanted, says Wainwright. Its pretty funny.

Wainwright says he hates Instagram and has never been on Facebook. Its just a way of communication that I dont think is healthy, he says. [Other designers] seem very focused on the Instagram crowd. Im not going to spend a million dollars in eight minutes, which is what a show costs. Its a disgusting waste of money when no one gives a s***. Ill think, How can I spend that million dollars in a really authentic and inspiring way? Film is perfect for that.

Sounds like a smart business decision. It seems life as a solo artist is treating Wainwright just fine thus far. And how is Neville getting on? I dont know how he is doing with his venture. I spoke to him last week but I didnt ask. He was skiing hes been skiing twice, which isnt very fair. I can imagine its quite a big change for him. Its a big change for me, he laughs.

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Marcus Wainwright on going solo at Rag & Bone, spirituality and Instagram - Evening Standard

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