Celebrity Life
R. Sandersonâs Exacting Take on Luxury Footwear and Fine Art
Bertrand Mak is giving all the shoes displayed in the presentation of Alke, his new athletically inspired shoe collection, the once-over with an air pump. No shoe goes uninspected, whether itâs on a high shelf or artfully perched on one of the pillars placed around the exhibition space.
To say Mak is an aesthete is to only acknowledge a fraction of what compels him -- from his appreciation for art and craft to his unrelenting quest for perfection. Having pivoted from a career in watches to setting up R. Sanderson, originally an Asian offshoot of English shoe brand Rupert Sanderson, but now owned outright by the Hong Kong-based entrepreneur, he attributes the journey to his attention to detail.
âIâve never imagined myself as someone who could do this,â says Mak. âMy obsession is watches. The cogs and screws are so minuscule, and you have to strive for perfection because otherwise the mechanism wonât be able to last. So I think Iâve brought that mentality into what Iâm creating here. Itâs that obsession with detail and trying not to overlook the smallest of details.â
[caption id="attachment_165157" align="alignnone" width="960"] Bertrand Mak, Owner of R. Sanderson[/caption]
Reception to R. Sanderson has been enthusiastic and the brand now has stores in Beijing and Taipei alongside two locations in Hong Kong. At the Landmark boutique, itâs normal to see groups of women begin trickling in at around quarter past noon and then, within 30 minutes, itâs at full capacity with crowd control in place. As some customers wait outside, those inside are looking for new styles, new colours and, more often than not, R. Sandersonâs greatest draw, new pebbles (pieces of smooth, rounded nickel that adorn the vamp) to ornament their existing pairs of shoes.
âHong Kong people are very open minded and theyâre very open to new brands and new designs, but in the beginning we didnât really have a signature, so I fastened on to that,â Mak says. âItâs something thatâs so essential to a luxury brand, having uniqueness, and by chance I met a number of artists who did gold-leaf painting and I really pushed this idea of using gold leaf as a signature on the heel, because for heels the heel is really the soul of the shoe. So I pushed that through and it became the backbone of our business.â
Having established the signature heel, another characteristic element of the shoes is the pebble, which as well as coming with each pair are also sold separately (as a pair). Mak has invited artisans and craftsmen from countries such as Japan and Germany to turn each set into works of art, inspired perhaps by Chinese brushwork or Andy Warholâs Shadow series (of which Mak just happens to own one set).
âThe way I look at our creations, theyâre not really shoes,â he says. âTheyâre objects of art. I hope I can better demonstrate that through our new charms and boxes, which seem more like art pieces than the shoes. But ultimately itâs about a jewel, the placement of the pebble, which I always have to underscore is not flat, so it takes a lot of skill to lacquer or work on the surface. Then thereâs the heel and how we work with artisans.â
[caption id="attachment_165158" align="alignnone" width="853"] A Zohiko lacquerware artist works on a pebble.[/caption]
For his different pebble collections, Mak has scoured the world for artisans, recruiting German glass makers to provide the âdiamond dustâ thatâs unique to the Shadow collection and replicating Warholâs own technique to achieve the glitter effect. âEvery Tom, Dick and Harry uses Swarovski crystals and strass because thatâs the easiest answer to bling,â says Mak, âbut Iâve always wanted to stay away from it because itâs tiring and itâs not innovative.â
Thanks to what he describes as âa long and passionate emailâ, Mak also secured a long-term partnership withcraftsmen in Japan, whose gold-leafing technique stretchesback to 1661. It also transpires that some of the best gold-leafing craftsmen are right here in Hong Kong, all of whom, Mak says, are working on his shoes.
âI want to be able to provide a platform for this and I want to be a part of preserving this craft so that it doesnât get lost,â Mak says. âA lot of techniques have been lost and Iâm not talking about gold leafing alone. Iâm talking about, for example, watchmaking, the way we make bags, doing etch stains. I could go on, but my vision is to create something that can bring together artisans and unsung heroes and not only respect the elements and heritage of the craft but to innovate from it as well.â
The gold-leafing technique used by the brand, forexample, was invented in-house. âGold leaf is thinner than paper, you know,â Mak says. âAnd if you polish it, it will tear. So the question was, how to polish it to a stage where we achieve that mirror effect without tearing the gold leaf. Thatâs something that we invented in-house by trial and error, and discovering techniques with constant failure along the way.â
[caption id="attachment_165162" align="alignnone" width="1024"] The RS Alphabet collection.[/caption]
This is especially impressive when looking at the progression of the pebbles in the Ink collection. The Japanese artisans that Mak persuaded to work with him have elevated their technique from the first series, where they lacquered and gilded the pebble to mimic brushstrokes. A bicolour gold and gloss finish was used for the second series, while the third Ink series introduces even more depth -- and now, the pebbles of the fourth series contain more than 30 layers of lacquer and gold leaf.
âYou have to really admire it in the flesh, to see the incredible depth and different layers of ink, gold leaf and lacquer,â Mak says. Even the craftsmen are impressed with what theyâve been able to achieve, thanks to Makâs insistence. âThe layering technique that our Japanese craftsmen are doing for us is something that theyâve never done in 300 years. What weâve created here is lacquer that contains a translucent red hue,â Mak says. âItâs almost like enamel and they only did it through a mistake that weâve now learnt to control.â
From the moment he asked his Italian manufacturer to add an inbuilt rubber sole into each pair of heels, Mak has been told time and again that realising his vision was an impossibility. âMany people have told me no,â he says.âTheyâve told me, âYou canât do it as someone from Hong Kong,â âYou canât be in Landmark,â and âYou canât work with artisans from Japan whoâve been in the business for three centuries, they wouldnât entertain your request.ââ
[caption id="attachment_165156" align="alignnone" width="754"] The Alke flat with customisable laces and tongues.[/caption]
Even the Alke collection can be seen as a response to naysayers. âThe collection is, of course, shoes but in a design language of sports and athletics. Everyone told me that this wasnât the answer. The answer instead was an ugly, faddy sneaker,â Mak says. âBut you know, I found that really repulsive and something I honestly couldnât force myself to make, so thatâs how the slogans [for customers to personalise their laces with] came to be -- âBe Braveâ, âTrust Yourselfâ, and âBelieve in the Extraordinaryâ. They really ring true in my mind and theyâve guided me throughout my journey.â
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