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For decades, France has been the fashion industry's spiritual home and creative epicenter. Exclusively for CNN Style, designer Jean Paul Gaultier reflects on the groundbreaking designers who shaped France's style. (Pictured: Jean Paul Gaultier, Haute Couture Autumn-Winter 2015)
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Couturier Christian Dior caused an international frenzy in 1947 when he introduced the "New Look," an hourglass silhouette that had all but disappeared from fashion during WWII. (Pictured: Christian Dior with models at London's Savoy Hotel, 1950)
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"His February 1947 collection's signature rebelled against wartime uniforms, austerity and fabric restrictions — the waist was cinched, calves were shown and busts were celebrated," says Gaultier. (Pictured: Models wear Christian Dior designs at London's Savoy Hotel, 1950)
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"Madame Grès had a wonderful haute couture house, Grès, and she worked in her own universe." (Pictured: Madame Grès with models outside London's Dorchester Hotel, 1971)
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"Originally a sculptor, her silk jersey pleated dresses looked as though they had been pulled out of ancient Greece." (Pictured: A 1952 Madame Gres dress displayed at the Bourdelle Museum in Paris, 2011)
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Gaultier cut his teeth working in the atelier of designer Pierre Cardin, known for his futuristic aesthetic. (Pictured: Elizabeth Taylor (left) with designer Pierre Cardin, wearing a headdress of his own design in 1967)
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"I'd always admired Cardin because he seemed like such a showman. He was so free, doing these geometric, sometimes abstract designs that were like architecture, which he had studied before he went into fashion." (Pictured: A model walks the runway at Pierre Cardin, 1972)
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"From early on I was always under the impression that (André Courrèges) was starting a revolution." (Pictured: André Courrèges with a model wearing one of his Haute Couture Autumn-Winter 1967 designs, 1967)
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"He was actually dressing the real woman of the 1960's — a modern woman who drove, rather than sipping cocktails at home." (Pictured: A model wears André Courrèges, 1967)
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Paco Rabanne may have been born in Spain, but he made France is home. His metallic dresses -- pieced together from different metals or coated plastics -- became a fashion staple for pop and screen stars in the 1960s. (Pictured: Paco Rabanne with model Isabel Feldel, wearing one of his designs, 1967)
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"It was everywhere, worn by all the major yé-yé singers -- the rock and roll girls of France — and Brigitte Bardot and Barbarella also wore Paco Rabanne." (Pictured: Models wear Paco Rabanne evening dresses, 1967)
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Yves Saint Laurent was at the creative helm of Christian Dior before branching out to start his own eponymous label in 1960. (Pictured: Yves Saint with friends and muses Betty Catroux and Loulou de la Falaise outside of his Paris Rive Gauche shop, 1969)
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He's commonly credited for legitimizing ready-to-wear in the eyes of fashion's elite. But in terms of design, the creation of "le smoking," a tuxedo for women, was what he was most notorious for. (Pictured: A model wears a pinstripe Yves Saint Laurent smoking, 1967)
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After stints at Pierre Cardin and Jean Patou, Gaultier founded his own label in 1976. His collections often reference androgyny, punk and French history, and balance humor with impeccable craftsmanship. (Pictured: Models walk Jean Paul Gaultier's Spring-Summer 1987 runway, 1986)
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Early on, his risqué and unconventional designs had him branded fashion's enfant terrible by the fashion press. (Pictured: A model walks the catwalk at Jean Paul Gaultier Spring-Summer 1993, 1992)
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Gaultier's approach to casting and production was equally progressive. He's one of few designers to consistently feature models of color on the catwalk and, in 2011, he was one of the first designers to work with trans model Andreja Pejic (who then went by Andrej). (Pictured: Andreja Pejic walks Jean Paul Gaultier Haute Couture Spring-Summer 2011)
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While he was a divisive figure early in his career, Gaultier is now part of the fashion establishment. (Pictured: Jean Paul Gaultier with model Anna Cleavland at his Haute Couture Autumn-Winter 2015 runway show)
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Who are Gaultier's French designers to watch? "Olivier Rousteing makes beautiful clothes for beautiful people at Balmain." (Pictured: Balmain Autumn-Winter 2015)
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Nicolas Ghesquière was Gaultier's assistant from 1990 to 1992. He first made a name for himself as creative director of Balenciaga, and has headed Louis Vuitton since 2013. (Pictured: Louis Vuitton Spring-Summer 2016)
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"I love the attitude of Hedi Slimane at Saint Laurent," says Gaultier. Like Yves Saint Laurent before him, Slimane is a polarizing designer whose designs often seem more casual and street-inspired than his contemporaries. (Pictured: Saint Laurent Autumn-Winter 2015 )

Editor’s Note: In October 2015, Balmain creative director Olivier Rousteing joined CNN Style as guest editor. He commissioned a series of features on the theme of #diversity, exploring issues around fashion, politics, gender, family, race and culture.

Story highlights

Contemporary fashion is deeply rooted in French history

The French designers of the 1960s and early 1970s challenged traditional elegance with radical ready-to-wear

As war and the sexual revolution influenced designers in the past, globalization has shaped the fashion landscape of today

CNN  — 

I didn’t go to fashion school. I’ve been against formal education ever since I discovered Santa Claus isn’t real, so everything I learned about fashion growing up, came from reading magazines and looking at photos.

I remember watching this beautiful movie, “Falbalas” from French director Jacques Becker, showing the life of a couturier in the 1940’s and the production of a fashion show, when I was 12 years old. The show had movement, it had life, and it had theater and it really captured my imagination. I’ve been fascinated by designers who evoke drama ever since.

For that reason, I’m very proud to be from France, which has given the world so many pioneering designers. While I don’t believe there’s anything innate about the French and style, it’s impossible to deny that contemporary fashion’s roots are in this country. From the beginning, France – and Paris in particular – has been the capital and heart of fashion, with a long list of innovators who changed the way we looked at clothes, the body and even ourselves.

And as the world becomes smaller and the industry more global, that history and influence are more important – and wider felt – than ever before. Experimentation, variety and quality can come from anywhere today, but the ones who laid the groundwork for this did so in France.

French fashion innovators

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Couturier Christian Dior at work in his Paris workroom.

Like many designers, I admired France’s most celebrated, original and audacious couturiers.

Christian Dior’s ground-breaking “New Look” changed the way women dressed around the world. His February 1947 collection’s signature rebelled against wartime uniforms, austerity and fabric restrictions — the waist was cinched, calves were shown and busts were celebrated.

Madame Grès had a wonderful haute couture house, Grès, and she worked in her own universe. Originally a sculptor, her silk jersey pleated dresses looked as though they had been pulled out of ancient Greece.

But it was the designers of the 1960’s and early 1970’s who truly pushed boundaries, challenging the traditional elegance of haute couture with radical prêt-à-porter (ready-to-wear) collections.

After decades of classic sophistication, this new wave of designers brought something fresh— in tune with the sensibility of the time in which we were living. They knew about the sexual revolution, about going into space, about modernism and architecture, and used that in their work. No one had seen anything like it before.

I started working with Pierre Cardin when I was 18. He was one of the industry’s top innovators. I’d always admired Cardin because he seemed like such a showman. He was so free, doing these geometric, sometimes abstract designs that were like architecture, which he had studied before he went into fashion. He also designed everything from furniture to industrial design to car interiors.

André Courrèges worked at Balenciaga for 10 years before opening his own house. He was a trained engineer before becoming a designer, and from early on I was always under the impression that he was starting a revolution. I realize now it was because he was actually dressing the real woman of the 1960’s — a modern woman who drove, rather than sipping cocktails at home. His clothes may have looked futuristic, but they were perfect for that moment.

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Elizabeth Taylor chats to designer Pierre Cardin, who's wearing what looks like an aluminium gas mask.

I also loved Paco Rabanne, who invented the incredible metallic dress. It was everywhere, worn by all the major yé-yé singers – the rock and roll girls of France — and Brigitte Bardot and Barbarella also wore Paco Rabanne. That was really important to me because I was always influenced and inspired by what actresses and singers were wearing. The jet set were just unfashionable and tacky – I looked to women with personality.

Then there was Yves Saint Laurent, who was always different from the others. He was scandalous and really reflected change – the sexual revolution, the rise of liberal beliefs in France – in a glamorous way. He approached innovation fabulously, showing a woman in a suit, but without sacrificing her femininity.

Learning from those who paved the way

I’ve always tried to be honest and push boundaries in the same way as those before. I never wanted to dress the classic, elegant type and I realized early on in my career that what the critics say is chic isn’t always so.

My career really began in the mid-1970’s. By then, Paris had somehow become more conservative. Fashion wasn’t like what you see in the movies: after the hippie period of the 1960’s, people began to dress with less of a sense of adventure, as if they were rejecting fashion, and dressing very plain. I wanted something else, and so what I did at the beginning shocked a lot of people.

After Pierre Cardin, I went on to Jean Patou, an old couture house that no longer exists. It was stereotypical of the more traditional French fashion code. When I arrived to work in my biker boots, they said “But why? Where is your motorbike?”

And so I decided that when I created my own collection, I would push the limit of what’s beautiful and what’s not.

When I started designing for myself in 1976, many found my work too sexual, and for a long time the French fashion press ignored me. “He plays, he makes games, it’s not real clothes,” they said.

Of course they were real clothes, just simply put together and played with. Who says you can’t wear a biker jacket with a tutu, or that men can’t be sexy and androgynous?

The younger generation of women responded. They wanted that mix, and I was doing something that pleased them.

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A corset from Madonna's "Blonde Ambition" tour, designed by Jean Paul Gaultier.

So much changed since then. Now, Saint Laurent, Courrèges and Cardin are heroes in French fashion history, and the French press hasn’t criticized me nearly as much over the last 20 years — making me question whether I’m doing something wrong!

The latest generation of French designers is doing wonderful things – Olivier Rousteing makes beautiful clothes for beautiful people at Balmain; Nicolas Ghesquière is fantastic; I love the attitude of Hedi Slimane at Saint Laurent – but dynamic designers from other countries are keeping rebellion and difference alive in this country too.

Like war and occupation shaped the ’40s, and the sexual revolution changed the world in the ‘60s, globalization has changed the landscape of today.

Now more than ever, Paris Fashion Week is where the world’s most talented and provocative strive to build their brands and share their point of view because they know what Paris represents: creativity, audacity and, still, prestige.

Here I think of the creative Japanese designer Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garçons, my former assistant Martin Margiela from Belgium, Vivienne Westwood from England, and Rick Owens from America – all of whom have shown on schedule here.

Like the French visionaries I admired when I was growing up, these international designers have opened my eyes to incredible – and sometimes shocking – new concepts and ideas. They have their own world and their own identity, and do things you cannot expect from anyone else.

How very French of them.

As told to CNN’s Allyssia Alleyne