It was officially announced today, after months of swirling speculation, that John Galliano, 53, the British designer who formerly headed an eponymous label and the house of Christian Dior, has been appointed creative director of Maison Martin Margiela.

Renzo Rosso, president of OTB – Only The Brave, the £1.25bn holding company which owns Margiela as well as brands such as Viktor and Rolf, Marni and denim behemoth Diesel – is quoted in Womenswear Daily stating “Margiela is ready for a new charismatic creative soul… John Galliano is one of the greatest, undisputed talents of all time — a unique, exceptional couturier for a maison that always challenged and innovated the world of fashion.”

The above are both undoubtedly true. But Galliano’s three decades of creation have been rocky, including penury, bankruptcy and much controversy. The latter, of course, includes his dismissal in 2011 from his roles at his own label and Dior following a drunken anti-Semitic outburst in a Paris bar.

Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Show all 26 1 /26 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 6 Jul 2005: Paris Haute Couture Week - Christian Dior by John Galliano Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela 20th anniversary show spring/summer 2009 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela 20th anniversary show spring/summer 2009 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela 20th anniversary show spring/summer 2009 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela 20th anniversary show spring/summer 2009 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela 20th anniversary show spring/summer 2009 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk John Galliano spring/summer 2001 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela spring/summer 1996 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk John Galliano for Dior Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Dior ready to wear autumn/winter 2000 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Dior ready to wear autumn/winter 2000 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Dior haute couture spring/summer 2000 Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 9 Jul 2014: Maison Martin Margiela show, Haute Couture autumn/winter 2014, Paris Fashion Week Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 17 January 2000: A model presents a high waisted grey linen pants with a crumpled tie as a belt, by British designer John Galliano for Dior Getty Images Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Martin Margiela autumn/winter 2006-2007 Haute Couture collection, presented in Paris Getty Images Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 11 Mar 1999: John Galliano during autumn/winter 1999 Paris Fashion Week Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Oct 2005: Martin Margiela show for spring/summer 2006, Paris Fashion Week Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 1 Oct 2006: Martin Margiela show for spring/summer 2007, Paris Fashion Week Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 7 Oct 1988: John Galliano show during 1989 London Fashion Week Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 21 Jan 1997: Paris Fashion Week - Dior Couture Collection by John Galliano, his debut for the house Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 17 Oct 1991: John Galliano fashion show in Paris in 1991 Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk John Galliano's new role at Maison Martin Margiela 18 Oct 1990: Model on the Paris catwalk in 1990 wearing John Galliano Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Model on John Galliano's fashion show on 10 March 1989 Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 17 Oct 1989: Model on the runway for John Galliano show during 1989 London Fashion Week Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 12 Oct 1987: John Galliano's fashion show during the 1987 London Fashion Show where he won The Designer Of The Year Award London Fashion Week Rex Features Compare and contrast: Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk Margiela and Galliano on the catwalk 12 Oct 1987: John Galliano's fashion show during the 1987 London Fashion Show where he won The Designer Of The Year Award London Fashion Week Rex Features

He was later convicted and received a suspended fine from a French court. Galliano has repeatedly expressed his remorse for the incident – including a much-publicised interview in Vanity Fair in 2013, following a period spent at a rehabilitation centre for drug and alcohol addiction in Arizona. He also took instruction with Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League during his recovery period, whilst admitting in an October 2013 interview with US talk-show host Charlie Rose that he continued to battle his demons, and will do so all his life.

That was the spectacular crashing down of a designer whose star was previously one of the brightest in the fashion firmament. After a string of critically-acclaimed shows and a clutch of awards, in 1995 he was appointed to the house of Givenchy, part of the LVMH group who also took 91% ownership in his fledgling John Galliano label. At that point, he was the first Englishman since the 1940s to run a French haute couture house. In 1996, he was appointed to Dior, where he designed until 2011.

7 Oct 1988: John Galliano show during 1989 London Fashion Week (Rex Features)

The Margiela label, on paper, could not be more different than either Galliano or Dior. Famed for its blank labels – the four stitches affixing the corners, visible on the exterior, the only sign of overt branding – the label has for years spoken collectively as “we,” eschewing the idea of the singular superstar designer. Galliano, of course, took this to new heights with carefully choreographed catwalk bows, while Monsieur Dior appeared on the cover of Time magazine in 1957 – the first couturier to do so.

Add to that the aesthetic contrasts – Galliano and Dior both favouring exoticism and romanticism, grand ball gowns and couture flourishes, versus Margiela’s championing of “deconstruction.” Deconstruction entails clothes that have been somewhat unravelled, undone. Early Margiela collections used second-hand fabrics, creating sweaters from old army socks or an evening dress from the lining of a more precious gown, complete with exposed seams and hand-frayed hem. The approach was highly conceptual: one memorable collection featured precise adult-sized recreations of doll’s clothing, retaining the enormous proportions of snaps, zippers and thick stitching. Another featured garments distorted by specific proportions – a dress may be “enlarged” 100% horizontally, a pair of jeans blown up by 200%.

11 Mar 1999: Christian Dior by John Galliano during 1999 Paris Fashion Week (Rex Features)

How to reconcile the two? A fixation on history, on memory in dress. Plus, more obvious parallels. One of the hallmarks of the Galliano label was a newspaper print – a fusion of low and high that finds a reflection in Margiela’s reclamation of the rejected. His 1980s work shown on the London catwalk, rawer than his couture-influenced Paris collections with sweaters and jackets worn as skirts, clothes turned upside-down, misbuttoned and topsy-turvy, is also close in spirit to Margiela, while there are flashes of deconstruction in his Parisian clothing also. In a South Bank Show documentary from 1996, documenting his year designing for Givenchy and his rise to Dior, the milliner Stephen Jones, who worked regularly with Galliano from the early nineties onwards, recalls him and his then-design associate Bill Gaytten (now creative director of the Galliano label) throwing glasses of red wine at a model to devise a print.

There were other reflections: Galliano’s controversial spring/summer 2000 Dior haute couture “Homeless” collection, for instance, had roots in Margiela’s deconstruction. Of that collection, Galliano stated: “I wanted to turn couture on its head.”

That is exactly what this appointment does – not least for the Margiela label, which has floundered since its founder left the label in 2008 after a riotous 20th anniversary show. A variety of consultants and stylists have been brought in to inject the label with magic: generally, one season shots which have never quite given the label the kick required. Margiela’s ready-to-wear especially has become a pastiche of itself. The only concept recently has been the concept of trying to be conceptual. It hasn’t worked well.

Taking the reins chez Margiela is a hefty undertaking – comprising men’s and women’s ready-to-wear, accessories, fine and costume jewellery, a secondary line MM6 (all Margiela lines are denoted by numbers, bar the main womenswear collection) and an “Artisanal” line presented during Paris haute couture week. The latter is when Galliano is set to make his debut, in January.

Renzo Rosso has long expressed his admiration for John Galliano’s talent. Whilst denying rumours of the Margiela appointment in Paris last week, he stated” Who wouldn’t like to work with [John Galliano]? If he ever got back his name, I would be the first to produce his collections.” The Only The Brave company has also manufactured the John Galliano children’s line since 2008.

“I look forward to his return to create that fashion dream that only he can create,” says Renzo Rosso. “And wish him to here find his new home.” Words echoed across much of the fashion fraternity, who responded to the news with a frenzy of well-wishes. Galliano has made moves towards returning to the industry before: in 2013, he completed a much-publicised three-week period as “designer-in-residence” at Oscar de la Renta, for their winter collection of that year, and in May this year was appointed Creative Director of Russian perfumery firm L'Etoile, working with fashion photographers, stylists and hair and make-up specialists to devise imagery for the company. 9 Jul 2014: Maison Martin Margiela show, Haute Couture autumn/winter 2014, Paris Fashion Week

That indicates the willingness of the fashion world to embrace Galliano’s undisputed talent, following the considerable remorse he has expressed for his actions. His name has been rumoured in connection with a number of positions in the industry, including a permanent role at de la Renta, the recently vacated position of creative director of Nina Ricci, and potentially a position at the London-based label Mulberry.