Monday, September 03, 2012

Venice: Palazzo Mocenigo - Trame di moda – Donne e Stile at the Venice Film Festival exhibition.



Venice: Palazzo Mocenigo - Trame di moda – Donne e Stile at the Venice Film Festival exhibition.  With over seventy items of clothing from the most famous collections, fashion houses and costume designers in the world, Trame di moda – Donne e stile alla Mostra del Cinema di Venezia is the exhibition, until January 6 2013, that the FondazioneMusei Civici di Venezia  organized at Palazzo Mocenigo, Study Centre of the History of Fabrics and Costumes.  The exhibition was designed and curated by Fabiana Giacomotto, together with Alessandro Lai. With an installation curated by Sergio Colantuoni in the evocative rooms of the ground floor and piano nobile of Palazzo Mocenigo, it offers visitors a comparison between costumes from great films that were filmed in Venice, the current fashion that drew inspiration from these films and ideas, and the valuable items of clothing preserved in the museum.
Above: A dress designed by Roberto Capucci and worn by actress Valentina Cortese at a ball in Venice in 1987.

                     A detail - Palazzo Mocenigo, Study Centre of the History of Fabrics and Costumes.
   
Curator of the exhibition Fabiana Giacomotto, a writer and teacher of the Science of Fashion and Costume at the Sapienza University in Rome with a dress designed by Roberto Cavalli.

Co-curator Alessandro Lai, costume designer and art historian talks to Max Mara’s Laura Lusuardi, in the background the costumes for the movie Senso designed by Piero Tosi and directed by Luchino Visconti.
       A detail - Palazzo Mocenigo, Study Centre of the History of Fabrics and Costumes.
 
Trame di moda – Donne e stile at the Venice Film Festival exhibition.   The itinerary includes the eighteenth century andrienne of Palazzo Mocenigo that converse with the dress of the clockwork doll designed by Danilo Donati for Federico Fellini’s Casanova, and the priceless reinterpretation by Karl Lagerfeld and Fendi for a historical ball at Palazzo Corsini, as well as the delicate evening gowns designed by Piero Tosi for Silvano Mangano in Death in Venice or by Sandy Powell for The Wings of the Dove that were clearly the inspiration for the most fanciful stylists today, such as Roberto Cavalli, Gianfranco Ferre, Ermanno Scervino, Francesco Scognamiglio, and Giambattista Valli.
Above: Fur costume designed for Cinderella by Karl Lagerfeld and an outfit by Gianfranco Ferre.
 A detail - Palazzo Mocenigo, Study Centre of the History of Fabrics and Costumes.
 
Detail of a hand painted costume for Fellini’s Casanova designed by Danilo Donati.
 A detail - Palazzo Mocenigo, Study Centre of the History of Fabrics and Costumes.
 
The installation is curated by Sergio Colantuoni and his team, on his right Barbara Collini and on his left Sergio Perrone.

 
Costumes for The Talented Mr. Ripley worn by Gwyneth Paltrow and designed by Ann Roth 1997.
 A detail - Palazzo Mocenigo, Study Centre of the History of Fabrics and Costumes.

 
Marialuisa Frisia fashion curator author and director Fashion Design at the Faculty of Arts and Design of the Università Iuav di Venzia together with Chiara Squarcina director of Palazzo Mocenigo Study Centre of the History of Fabrics and Costumes.
 
Architect Mario Lupano.
President of the Fondazione  Musei Civici di Venezia Walter Hartsarich.
 
A detail of a dress designed by the Atelier Versace and worn by Anne Hathaway.

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