Fashion Designer on Her Way to a Posthumous Comeback?
Elsa Schiaparelli
Elsa Schiaparelli’s Shoe Hat (collaboration with Salvador Dalí), winter 1937-38 / Courtesy Tumblr
Elsa Schiaparelli and Dalí’s lobster dress / Courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art
Eight years after a career retrospective at the
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
Elsa Schiaparelli is back in the spotlight with
an exhibition at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute and an announcement from Italian businessman
Diego Della Valle that
he is relaunching the brand that bears her name. With all the buzz
surrounding the show and the revival, is the late fashion designer on
her way to a posthumous comeback?
Elsa Schiaparelli revolutionized fashion in the 1930s with her
surrealist tromp l’oeil sweaters, lobster dress, and whimsical prints.
In 1934 Time hailed her as “the one to whom the word ‘genius’ is applied
most often,” and said that Elsa Schiaparelli was a more dominant
influence in fashion at the time than her biggest rival,
Coco Chanel.
But in the end, it was Chanel who triumphed after Schiaparelli
shuttered her business in 1954, due to the post-war economic downturn.
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