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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Jess Cartner-Morley in Rome

Homecoming parade channels art and power of Rome for Fendi

Composite oof three looks from show including ivory cape coat, black lace outfit and black-and-white striped dress
Models on the catwalk at the Fendi haute couture show at the Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea in Rome. Composite: Reuters

“This is a cultural problem, and a political problem,” said Maria Grazia Chiuri before her first haute couture catwalk show for Fendi.

The problem, as the designer sees it, is Italy’s unwillingness to acknowledge fashion’s role in culture by giving it space in museums. To challenge this, Chiuri has bookended her Rome catwalk event with two fashion exhibitions in the city.

A show of Karl Lagerfeld’s early designs for Fendi that ran briefly in 1985 has been revived at the Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, the venue where Chiuri was showing. A second exhibition at a different Rome location will bring together the fashion house’s haute couture collections since 2015.

A Chiuri catwalk always has a point to make. During her decade at Dior, she made feminist slogan T-shirts and gave a space to local female writers and artists when staging destination shows around the world. She intends to use the Fendi platform to interrogate the assumptions of a country that takes fashion seriously as a business but not as an art form.

“I remember seeing the 1985 exhibition. It changed so much for me, but it was highly criticised,” Chiuri said, pointing out to reporters from the UK, France and US that Italy had no equivalent to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, or the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, all of which regularly stage high-profile fashion exhibitions.

Rome is Chiuri’s home town, the city where she was born and to which she returned at weekends while working in Paris. It is also where five Fendi sisters, Paola, Carla, Franca, Anna and Alda, took over their parents’ fur and leather boutique in the 1940s and turned it into a global luxury brand.

Moving to Milan would have been better for business, but Rome is “our great love, a city with a story on every street corner”, said Paola Fendi, now 95, this year.

There was a distinctively Roman flavour of power dressing to Chiuri’s couture debut. “I love a cape – probably because in Rome, we have the Vatican,” the designer said before the show. A full-length ivory caped coat, silk embroidery sweeping the floor, captured the grandeur of the eternal city; but it would also have looked at home on the red carpet – a corridor of power of another kind. There was black lace, both solemnly layered and daringly sheer, and trailing ecclesiastical sleeves with wide contrast satin cuffs.

The silhouette was free flowing, shapes suspended from the shoulder. “Completely different from the other couture house where I worked,” said Chiuri, referring to the hourglass “New Look” silhouette with which Dior is associated. For this collection, the designer said she had been inspired by kimono shapes and clothing traditions that created shape by draping around the body, rather than compressing flesh.

There was real fur on the catwalk, although upcycled from pelts and garments in the Fendi archive. “Fur is durable, and I think we should use it up,” said Chiuri. Fendi’s roots in the fur trade, which once gave the label an aura of glamour, have become an image problem that Chiuri will need to tackle as part of her brief to grow the brand, which is much smaller than its LVMH stablemate Dior. At Dior, where she served as the house’s first female creative director from 2016 to 2025, she almost quadrupled revenues from €2.2bn (£1.9bn) in 2017 to €9bn in 2024.

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