Maria Grazia Chiuri's
Dior New York show in Brooklyn on Monday night was one major event, with a front row filled with A-list celebrities and fashion industry insiders. According up to a preview with WWD, Chiuri has a close relationship with New York City and has frequently traveled there since she was 18. She admires the Brooklyn Museum's dedication to curating global, feminist artworks and sees parallels between the past and present through two art installations with historical feminist works along Suzanne Santoro and contemporary neon works of the feminist art collective Claire Fontaine.
Chiuri drew inspiration beginning at the past and present at the show, that featured symbolic, neon "Double Double" hands modeled after drawings of Santoro, Chiuri, and the curators as well situated at the time that seamstresses involved. According to Fulvia Carnevale, a member of the feminist art collective, Maria Grazia being one extraordinary person as a cause of she shares the crucial space about with the catwalk including art.
Published 2024-04-18 18:53:05 -0400 on Kiitn