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Citings & Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture

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Luar’s Spring 2019 collection for the ‘Thotaissance’

September 19, 2018 By Professor Arielle Saiber

“For his spring 2019 collection, Luar designer Raul Lopez was inspired by Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy. Or, more specifically, Purgatorio. While Lopez’s white, billowing pieces felt far more suited to the angels than Dante’s frozen, three-faced Satan, he was hoping to lift the audience up and away from 2018’s endless waves of bad news. ‘It’s like we’re living in purgatory right now,’ he said. ‘And I wanted to take us out of it.’

“If the goal was to distract people from the hellscape that is our current world, Lopez definitely succeeded. The show guests watched open-mouthed as models strolled by in ornate confections that seemed to float (as Dante put it, the designer ‘[deals] with shadows as with solid things’). They wore sculptural knife pleats and headpieces that looked like whipped cotton candy, and smeared, lived-in makeup.”    –Jocelyn Silver, Paper Magazine, September 17, 2018

Categories: Consumer Goods, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2018, 2019, Fashion, Purgatorio, Purgatory

Valentino Dress at the Met Gala 2016

May 29, 2016 By Professor Arielle Saiber

rachel-mcadams-a8082593-a8f5-492c-a745-1b9a9c7dd859

Rachel McAdams in a gold-beaded Valentino dress with lines from Dante’s Divine Comedy.    —US Magazine, May 2, 2016

Contributed by Donatella Stocchi-Perucchio

Categories: Consumer Goods, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2016, Canto 5, Fashion, Inferno, Love, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, Paolo and Francesca, Valentino

Dolce & Gabbana’s Alta Moda Collection, Fall 2015

December 8, 2015 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

Alta-Moda-Dolce-Gabbana-Homer-Dante-Shakespeare

“A movie-night selection made by Dolce’s boyfriend, a gracious Brazilian advertising executive named Guilherme Siqueira, had provided the inspiration for this season’s Alta Moda collection: the 1999 version of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” directed by Michael Hoffman and starring Michelle Pfeiffer, which was filmed in Italy. Dolce explained, ‘When you see this movie, you go, “This is like a dream in Portofino.”‘

“He and Gabbana had been struck by the film’s vision of an Italian countryside populated with characters drawn from ancient Greek myth: Theseus, the mythological founder of Athens, and his betrothed, Hippolyta, the Amazonian queen. The forthcoming fashion show, Dolce said, was an attempt to imagine the result of a triple collaboration: ‘Homer, the visionary; Dante, the poet of Purgatory and Paradise, with Beatrice, la bellezza; and Shakespeare, with the crazy humor.'” — Rebecca Mead, “The Couture Club,” The New Yorker

Categories: Performing Arts, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 2015, Beatrice, Dolce & Gabbana, Fashion, Homer, Italy, Portofino, Shakespeare

Inferno T-Shirt by SanCrò Firenze

February 21, 2014 By Professor Elizabeth Coggeshall

Sancro_inferno_uomo“Lettering originale disegnato a mano dei gironi danteschi, stampato su morbidissimo cotone organico.”    –-SanCrò Firenze

Categories: Consumer Goods
Tagged with: 2014, Circles of Hell, Clothing, Fashion, Hell, Inferno, Italy, Lasciate ogne speranza, T-shirts

Alexander McQueen’s “Dante” Collection, 1996

February 5, 2014 By Gretchen Williams '14

alexander-mcqueen-dante-collection-1996“McQueen’s theatrical ‘Dante’ collection was staged at a church in Spitalfields in 1996. The show opened with organ music filling the church that was soon drowned out by gunfire. Models walked the runway looking wearing wore crucifix masks, denim splashed with bleach and lots of lace. McQueen commented that the collection was ‘not so much about death, but the awareness that it’s there’.”    —The Concept of Fashion, December 20, 2011

Some of the pieces from this 1996 collection have been included in the “Isabella Blow: Fashion Galore!” (2014) exhibition in London. To learn more about the London show, see “In London, Fashion History Up Close.”

Categories: Performing Arts, Visual Art & Architecture
Tagged with: 1996, 2014, Fashion, London

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How to Cite

Coggeshall, Elizabeth, and Arielle Saiber, eds. Dante Today: Citings and Sightings of Dante's Works in Contemporary Culture. Website. Access date.

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