Alexander Gallé is Partner and Creative Director at GALLÉ - a design and branding studio focused on luxury, entertainment and fashion brands - and one of Europe's leading design studios in the luxury brands online sector. Gallé's portfolio includes websites, online ads and e-commerce solutions for Yves Saint Laurent, Asprey, Fabergé, Garrard, Dior Beauty, Marchesa, Corum Timepieces, Boucheron, Jimmy Choo, MCM, Twentieth Century Fox, Buena Vista International, Miramax, Metropolitan Hotel, Marbella Club, Hotel Casadelmar, Lebua Hotels and Resorts and many leading hotels around the world. Gallé led the re-branding strategy for Corum Timepieces in 2006 and art directed their Unlock and Conquer ad campaigns in 2007. Later in that year, Gallé's studio also launched Artipolis, the social network for art and design professionals. Gallé combines 15 years of design and art direction with in-depth knowledge of the commercial and strategic aspects of the internet and Web 2.0.
Saturday, 28 March 2015
Tuesday, 10 March 2015
Smart Luxury
This essay was published in Luxury Briefing in February 2015
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Smart luxury
by Alexander Gallé
10 February 2015
We're now 15 years into the 21st century. It's worth taking a moment to think about the
expectations we have from this century, or at least the next 15 years or so. Luxury and the future have in common that thinking
about them highlights our aspirations to an ideal life.
The year 2000 was in itself a huge future landmark for
decades prior to it, a year into which we projected our wildest dreams. Colonies on the moon and household robots in
the year 2000 were pretty much guaranteed, back in the 70s.
Since then, however, many people seem to have become rather
shortsighted about their expectations for the future. Henry Ford once said: "If I'd asked
people what they wanted, they would have asked for faster horses". Today, it seems that many people would just
ask for faster internet connections.
Just as an automobile is categorically different from a faster
horse, so the internet will soon be categorically different from just "faster
connections".
In 15 years' time, the bandwidth used by internet connections
between objects will completely dwarf the connections between people. The internet of things is just in its
infancy, so if you can remember the explosion in internet functionality that
started in the late 90s you should get an idea of the scope of things to come
in that domain.
The level of artificial intelligence that will be embedded
in those connected objects will be off the charts by today's standards. Self-driving cars are already safer and more
accurate than humans, today. Give the system a few years to upgrade and
you'll have AI drivers picking you up from one side of town within seconds of
you ordering one, driving through the city at a steady 100mph, all the while
coming no closer than 2 feet from any other car or person, and dropping you off
just a couple of minutes later on the other side of town.
The great news for our industry is that intelligence in
objects and services is exactly what luxury is about. The idea of creating an intelligent user experience
- one that combines the efficiency of the machine with the soulfulness of human
interaction - is one of our main aspirations, whether we're designing new cars
or new hotels. So far, it's the tech
sector that has learned from the luxury sector, as demonstrated by Apple's rise
from near bankruptcy in the late 90s to the world's number one company in 2012,
or Tesla's rise from an electric car company to one of the world's best
cars. It's now time for the luxury
sector to learn from companies like Apple and Tesla, and take the users'
aspirations a few steps further.
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