Versace appoints Belgian designer Pieter Mulier as chief creative officer

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Belgian designer Pieter Mulier has been appointed artistic director of Versace.

Belgian designer Pieter Mulier has been the creative director of Alaia for the past five years.

PHOTO: AFP

Jacob Gallagher

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MILAN – For the first time in Versace’s 48-year history, the Italian fashion house’s creative vision has been placed in the hands of someone born outside Italy.

On Feb 5, Pieter Mulier, a Belgian fashion designer who for the past five years has been the creative director of Alaia, was named chief creative officer at Versace.

In a news release, Versace’s executive chair Lorenzo Bertelli wrote that he believed Mulier “can truly unlock Versace’s full potential”. Mulier will assume the job on July 1.

It does not require a red-string conspiracy theorist to visualise how the appointment came to be.

In December 2025, Prada Group closed on its deal to acquire Versace for US$1.4 billion (S$1.78 billion). Days later, Dario Vitale, an Italian designer who had assumed Versace’s creative direction from Donatella Versace just eight months earlier, was abruptly forced out.

Immediately, Mulier’s name began to swirl as Vitale’s successor. Those rumours grew louder when it was announced in late January that Mulier would be stepping down from Alaia. His final collection for the house will be presented in March.

“Over the past five years, Pieter and the exceptional team he led have shaped Alaia’s creative renewal,” Alaia’s chief executive Myriam Serrano wrote in a release, which did not name a successor for Mulier.

When you factor in friendships, Mulier is an obvious choice for Versace. The 49-year-old spent much of his career until his time at Alaia working alongside Raf Simons, a fellow Belgian designer who since 2020 has been co-creative director of Prada.

A graduate of the Institut Saint-Luc in Brussels, where he studied architecture, Mulier had been Simons’ right hand at both Christian Dior and Calvin Klein. Fashion is a shallow sandbox: Matthieu Blazy, Mulier’s former partner, who likewise worked with Simons at Calvin Klein, is today Chanel’s artistic director.

Thus, Mulier’s appointment at Versace on the surface looks like one friend bringing a long-time creative compatriot back into his corporate fold. This, though, gives short shrift to Mulier’s independent reputation.

At Alaia, Mulier’s designs could demonstrate both assured theatrics and prosaic elegance. He served up aubergine cocoon coats, clingy off-the-shoulder dresses and lustrous, belted leather jackets with a 1980s verve.

A show at the Guggenheim in 2024 demonstrated the breadth of his tastes. Models wore clinical white mini-dresses, like Star Trek doctors; denim pants as wide as curtains; ruched skirts; and dresses that recalled Yves Klein forms.

Not all his ideas landed: An Alaia show in 2025 featured models with their hands restrained under tubular dresses, a concept that some interpreted as Mulier’s unnecessarily restricting the women he was supposed to make glamorous.

Yet, overall, Mulier’s Alaia earned raves.

When he joined, he had large shoes to fill. Azzedine Alaia, the Tunisian couturier who started the company and died aged 82 in 2017, was held up as a designer with a preternatural understanding of how to imbue women with elegance and assuredness.

But Mulier lifted Alaia, owned by the luxury conglomerate Richemont, from an idiosyncratic jewel box to a competitive fashion business, drawing new retailers and Barbadian singer Rihanna to his shows. His mesh ballet flats, essentially a wisp of cheesecloth affixed to a gossamer sole, were an oft-copied trend.

In late 2024, the company was selling tens of thousands of pairs annually, the designer said in an interview that year with The New York Times, providing a firm foundation for a business that Mulier said had grown in sales volume by about 10 times since he started.

At Versace, Mulier will again have large shoes to fill, but under a far different context.

Vitale’s lone Versace runway show had been the pleasant shock of Milan Fashion Week in September 2025. A veteran of Miu Miu, where he worked under Miuccia Prada, Vitale was a relative unknown when he took the job at Versace.

His debut collection was provocative and winsome, jammed with lurid Dick Tracy colours, shirts slashed to reveal peekaboo cutouts, deco checked prints (a seeming nod to Gianni Versace’s love of Miami), oddball proportions and trousers that were purposefully bunched at the crotch.

Young celebrities like American singer Addison Rae, British singer Olivia Dean and New Zealand singer Lorde were soon wearing Vitale’s Versace creations, and eager retailers were raring to see shoppers respond to the new Versace look.

Whatever sparked the collection, it was swiftly snuffed out. Some in the industry now believe that Vitale took the job knowing that his former bosses were going to fire him.

That may be so, but regardless, it is natural that Versace’s new owners at Prada Group would want to put their own imprint on the brand.

For that, they certainly did not look far outside their social circle. NYTIMES

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