OLIVIER ZAHM — So you were pretty ambitious from the get-go. When you arrived in Paris, was your goal to create your brand, or to be part of a brand?
GLENN MARTENS — I think most students come out of Antwerp with the idea of one day having their own company or their own brand. I first came to Paris because there was a jury member when I was in the fourth year, doing my master’s, who placed me at Jean Paul Gaultier. So, I had my first job experience straight after graduation — which was great because I would never have been able to afford an internship.
OLIVIER ZAHM — So, you were immediately hired?
GLENN MARTENS — Yeah, dream scenario! [Laughs] I mean, junior designer for the menswear at Gaultier, for the pre-collection at Gaultier — I was very lucky. Honestly, I was super lucky. It didn’t last for that long because my boss’s team got dismantled. That was with Gilles Rosier. And after that, I had all different kinds of experiences. I thought it was quite good for me to learn as much as possible. I first went to work for Yohan Serfaty — he was running his own brand in Istanbul. So, I was in Istanbul for a year. Then I worked for Bruno Pieters on different collaborations — like with Weekday, from the H&M group, then his first Honest By collection.
OLIVIER ZAHM — What is it called? Honest By?
GLENN MARTENS — Honest By, yeah. I did the first collection, which launched the brand. And then I started doing consulting, for Hugo Boss, for example. Through this kind of work, I made money to build my own…
OLIVIER ZAHM — So, you did a lot!
GLENN MARTENS — A lot of different things.
OLIVIER ZAHM — You have a real work ethic.
GLENN MARTENS — [Laughs]
OLIVIER ZAHM — No, seriously.
GLENN MARTENS — That’s why now I’m 34, and I’m going back to the parties. [Laughs] Because in my 20s, I was fully focused on work. And now I’m a bit more settled, so I’m, like, “Ok, let’s take time and discover life.”
OLIVIER ZAHM — How did you get involved with Y/Project?
GLENN MARTENS — Yohan Serfaty, who started Y/Project, had passed away a few months prior. It was a company in mourning. Also, it was a very dark collection. It was beautiful but quite niche — leaning toward a kind of Rick Owens direction. And this really reflected Yohan’s personality. He was a Tim Burton figure or character — tall, super-skinny, wearing long leather jackets. In the beginning, we decided to stay as close as possible to Yohan’s world, and then slowly change to something a bit closer to my world, something a little fresher. I always thought you have so many great designers doing that already — you have Rick Owens, Ann Demeulemeester — doing great things like they do, so why would we also try to take that direction? But the idea was really to take our time, and we really managed. After two years, under my direction, the brand’s 20 stores were a little more like Opening Ceremony,
OLIVIER ZAHM — You seem to be very relaxed and deal easely with the stress at work. You don’t lose your sense of humor?
GLENN MARTENS — We’re a very good team. We’re really a team. It’s like a family. We were five people when I arrived. Now we’re 20 — 25 if we include freelancers. The challenge is that every season, it’s a full new story. Because every season, we grow so much that there are new things coming in. You have to reinvent your way of working for new factories, a new team member… You have to get seniors. It’s always a whole new way of working. It’s never stable. [Laughs] It’s always, like, “Okay, what’s happening now?”
OLIVIER ZAHM — There’s no routine.
GLENN MARTENS — We’re growing so much — by, like, 40% every season. There’s no routine. And then you have cooperations, etc. So that’s a challenge — to deal with all these changes and still do your thing, and not lose your way, the initial identity of the label.
OLIVIER ZAHM — And you may have to face industrial problems. And you’re not trained for that, necessarily.
GLENN MARTENS — Right! And everybody at Y/Project was still learning the job by doing. But there comes a point when you have to stop making these baby mistakes.
OLIVIER ZAHM — Where do you find your ideas? Because you say you didn’t follow the Owens-Margiela-Demeulemeester path. People connect you with Vetements, but that is also Margiela, in a way.
GLENN MARTENS — I honestly think that makes sense. Because—
OLIVIER ZAHM — Yes. A method, almost.
GLENN MARTENS — It’s definitely a method.
OLIVIER ZAHM — There is so much to learn from him.
GLENN MARTENS — He’s a genius. And, of course, some designers do it more literally than others. We have a lot of second degré [tongue in cheek] — that’s really the main idea of the collections. It always has to be…
OLIVIER ZAHM — Fun.
GLENN MARTENS — Fun.
OLIVIER ZAHM — Interesting, yes. Surprising.
GLENN MARTENS — It needs to be fun. It needs to be happy. I just think that clothes need to be fun to wear — you need to be challenged a bit. It’s cute that you can give that to people — that they’re surprised, and they don’t know what to do. The whole idea is to trigger people. But to come back to your original question: my ideas mostly have to do with Belgium, actually. Very historic.
OLIVIER ZAHM — So, your approach and your pleasure in design is… you don’t take it too seriously?
GLENN MARTENS — No. I think it’s really very much about enjoying yourself. And [about] individuality. That’s also important for me. If you look at our collection plan, or the catwalk, you have so many different kinds of people jumping in that collection. And in so many different directions — our production groups go from sportswear, denim, streetwear, corsetry, tailoring… There are all different kinds of situations.
OLIVIER ZAHM — You’re very eclectic.
GLENN MARTENS — It’s super eclectic. But I think it reflects personalities. I can be a club kid, I can be a loving grandson, I can be a lover, I can be a businessman — and all in one day. [Laughs] You can be all these different kinds of people in one day. Also, there’s the fact that we’re traveling all the time. You’re going to be in LA tomorrow — there’s a whole different Olivier in LA… Surroundings always have an influence on you.
OLIVIER ZAHM — So, you need this variety in a collection.
GLENN MARTENS — I need that. And I also think it’s really fun that every single piece is versatile. You can change it, you can adapt it. It’s really pushing individuality. You really have to own the piece. It has to become something you feel comfortable with. Instead of hiding in it. There’s a lot of people who wear clothes to be part of an army.
OLIVIER ZAHM — How is this versatility compatible with a clear image for your label?
GLENN MARTENS — We don’t do a lot of branding. We have a bit of branding, of course, but we don’t do that much because we try to avoid this army figure. It’s more about eclectic individualities. We’re still quite small, we’re still very niche, and people are coming to us for that. It’s a very nice position to be in — today, in this situation, in this brand. We can still do it. I don’t have a brand manager pushing me all the time, saying, “You sold so many jerseys — push that.”
OLIVIER ZAHM — But we can immediately identify what you do.
GLENN MARTENS — There’s a link, yeah… There’s opulence. I think the link is opulence. It’s always very rich.
OLIVIER ZAHM — Generous, yes.
GLENN MARTENS — [Laughs] Not rich like money, but in form.
OLIVIER ZAHM — We are lucky to have you in Paris because you bring a new energy, and Paris for a while was a bit “done” on the fashion map. Like, from 2005 to 2010, we were wondering, “What’s going on in Paris?” It’s a paradox because Paris is seen as a place for fashion, but there are not so many young designers, not so much new blood, exciting energy.
GLENN MARTENS — I think there were always interesting designers shown in Paris, but they were coming from outside. But Paris changes a lot, no? I don’t know how you feel about it, but I really feel it. I’ve lived here for 10 years. I think it’s a different city… There’s a whole underground scene that is opening up. There’s a whole music scene, there’s a party scene. There are cultural centers in Pantin, or wherever. I think there are a lot of things slowly changing. And I think that goes hand-in-hand with fashion, of course. I think Paris got a bit of a wake-up call. It was, like, “Okay, move your butt.” [Laughter] You can’t rely on the big ones only.