
2 minute read
VALENTINO
from Miameataly_sett_2022
by Dario Onofri
FASHION SHOW IN VENICE,
Articolo Creato Da Giuliano Benedetto (Tvfashion Style Dubai )
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THE Maison led by Pierpaolo Piccioli returns to live show, in the heart of the Darsena with a forge of painters for the realization of 84 dresses .
The inspiration comes from the creativity of 17 international artists.
The artists, Chosen together with Gianluigi Ricuperati, writer, director of Domus Academy and curator of the cultural program of MIA Fair, are: Joel S. Allen, Anastasia Bay, Benni Bosetto, Katrin Bremermann, Guglielmo Castelli, Maurizio Cilli, Danilo Correale, Luca Coser, Jamie Nares, Francis Offman, Andrea Respino, Wu Rui, Sofia Silva, Alessandro Teoldi, Patricia Treib, Malte Zenses. And with the participation of Kerstin Bratsch.
It was very surprising how the dresses from the magnificent Valentino collection “Des Ateliers” paraded in front of the installation "Idee di Pietra-Olmo", by Chus Martinez, commissioned by the Vuslat Foundation for the 2021 Architecture Biennale.
While models walked the catwalk, the reflections of color of their dresses and sequins reverberated as they ran on the water.
The presentation concluded with a dramatic look, modeled by Rianne Van Rompaey, that was based on two of Nares’s large-scale brushstroke paintings, which she creates with her own custom-made brushes. The hand-sewn two-piece garment—which took 700 hours to make, according to Vogue—was a dress and a dramatic cape featuring a five-color red screen print on white cady silk.
Nares had no idea that her work would serve as the finale look until the day before the show, and after she arrived in Venice for the occasion.
“It’s a great honor to be given that place,” she said. “And the dress was incredible. The delicacy and intricacy of the stitching and the folds and sculpting of the fabric—it gave me a great respect for the work that they do.”
The result appears fluid and deceptively effortless, almost as if capturing flowing water or a fluttering ribbon.
“There’s a feeling of being moved by an unseen force, like an interior wind that I guess is the spirit,” Nares said. “It’s like a wind that emanates from somewhere deep inside. fully charged with memories, and hopes, and desires, and intentions, and surprises.”
“It was very interesting to see the brushstrokes on actual fabric that was moving,” she added. “It kind of animated them in a way that was a nice surprise.” "Venice was part of the vision I had from the beginning: it was the only place in the world where to present a collection of this kind and, moreover, it is a context in which nothing is added or taken away: the light and power of Venice are the perfect setting to immerse my work », wrote the creative director in the notes of the show.
VALENTINO
WHEN ART MEETS FASHION


