Solange was a survivor of a Nazi concentration camp after being arrested by the Nazis in 1942. She died in Paris on 3 November 1976 at the age of 78.
Early life
Solange Marie Christine Louise de Labriffe was born in Amiens, in northern France, on 5 April 1898.[2] Born into the House of Labriffe, her father was Camille, Count of Labriffe, and her mother was Countess Anne-Marie Vassart d'Hozier.[5] She had an older sister, Marie de Labriffe (1893–1985).[6]
Career
In the late 1920s,[7][8] Solange started working as a fashion consultant[9][10] and later became the fashion editor[4] of French Vogue magazine under the name Solange de Noailles.[3][7] By October 1928, she was signing her articles as Solange d'Ayen.[11] She also wrote for American Vogue.[11][4][12][13] Irish journalist Carmel Snow, who was working for Vogue at that time, said of Solange: "she was the person I most wanted at that time to fashion myself on".[10] Solange was well-connected in the Paris social circle known as "le tout Paris" and introduced Snow to several members of the Paris elite.[10]
In 1935, she helped Vogue editor-in-chief Edna Woolman Chase persuade French painter Christian Bérard – a close friend of hers – to work for the magazine as a fashion illustrator.[14]
She worked as a fashion editor of French Vogue until the 1940s.[4] In 1949, she was managing the fashion house of Robert Piguet.[15]
In 1951, she became an editor of Maison & Jardin magazine.[16]
Towards the end of her life, she was known as Solange de Labriffe.[2]
Her husband, Jean de Noailles, was a member of the French Resistance during World War II and was arrested by the Gestapo on 22 January 1942, as a result of an anonymous denunciation.[25][26] He died at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp on 14 April 1945,[5] a few days before the end of the war.[26] Solange was also arrested by the Nazis in 1942 and sent to the Fresnes Prison, while her family and friends such as Miller were unaware of what had happened to her.[24] Solange was said to be "a shadow of herself" when Miller found her after the war.[24][27] In 1952, the Paris military court sentenced Suzanne Provost, a Gestapo collaborator accused of having denounced Jean de Noailles, to 20 years of imprisonment.[25] In 1954, Solange formally accused SS officerHelmut Knochen of having kidnapped her husband.[28] Knochen was sentenced to death by a Parisian military tribunal in 1954, but was later pardoned by President de Gaulle and released in 1962.[29]
French fashion designer Hubert de Givenchy, who had met Solange while he was working as an apprentice of Robert Piguet, described her as a "great beauty", who had "classic taste", and said that she always wore black because she had lost her husband and son in the war.[22]
Death
Solange died in Paris at the age of 78 on 3 November 1976.[2] She was buried at the Château de Maintenon in France.[30]
Taylor, Lou; McLoughlin, Marie (9 January 2020). Paris Fashion and World War Two: Global Diffusion and Nazi Control. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN9781350000261.
^ abcdd'Ayen, Solange (15 October 1940). "Letter from France". Vogue. pp. 114–115. Archived from the original on 22 August 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2023. This is a letter from the Duchesse d'Ayen, fashion editor of French Vogue, who is temporarily living in Unoccupied France.
^ abc"Maison de Labriffe"(PDF). Racines & Histoire (in French). 18 November 2022. p. 11. Archived(PDF) from the original on 22 August 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
^Deambrosis-Martins, Simone (3 April 1949). "La Elegancia". La Opinión (in Spanish). p. 12. Archived from the original on 22 October 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
^Simon, Linda (October 2011). Coco Chanel. Reaktion Books. pp. 86–88. ISBN9781861899651. Archived from the original on 22 October 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
^Burke, Carolyn (6 October 2010). Lee Miller: A Life. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 231. ISBN9780307766632. Archived from the original on 22 August 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
^ abMartin, Georges (1993). Histoire et généalogie de la maison de Noailles (in French). Imprimerie Mathias.
^Maxwel, Elsa (16 January 1945). "Innocents Abroad". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 17. Archived from the original on 22 October 2023. Retrieved 21 October 2023. In what category would Mr. Crawford place the Duc d'Ayen, a prisoner in Germany, and his beautiful young wife, Solange, who emerged almost unrecognizable from a Nazi concentration camp?
^Seebohm, Caroline (26 May 1982). The Man who was Vogue: The Life and Times of Condé Nast. Viking Press. p. 349. ISBN9780670453665. Solange d'Ayen, the aristocratic and beautiful fashion editor (to whom Poulenc once dedicated a song)