VOGUE Australia

IN HER STRIDE

Attuned to youth culture and inspired by women, Donatella Versace is older, wiser and stronger.

- By Andrea Lee.

Attuned to youth culture, Donatella Versace is older, wiser and stronger.

“SOCIAL MEDIA HAS BECOME ESSENTIAL TO MY WORK”

The news is that Donatella Versace, 62, is “woke”. When did this happen? Was it last September, when she presented her defiantly wearable spring collection exploring female strength and set to a feminist soundtrack featuring inspiratio­nal sisterhood lyrics, or continued for autumn/ winter ’17/’18 with her paean to equality and unity – words printed on dresses and beanies? Or in October, when Michelle Obama slayed her final White House state dinner in an Atelier Versace rose-gold chain-mail gown? Was it the moment she joined forces with pouty rock rebel Zayn Malik, inviting him to design a capsule collection for her Versus line? Or when the latest fabulous Versace coffee-table book appeared – except that for the first time it was not about Gianni but all about Donatella? When her Instagram followers reached one million, and millennial­s started calling her fierce? Whatever the answer, Casa Versace is on a roll. Retail sales are up, hitting almost $500 million in 2015. Thirty new stores have opened around the globe. Equity giant Blackstone has taken a 20 per cent stake in the company. A Palazzo Versace hotel of sybaritic luxe has sprouted from the sands of Dubai. And at the heart of it all is Donatella. It’s her moment – some say her feminist moment.

Visiting her to investigat­e all this at the Versace headquarte­rs in Milan is like paying court to the tsarina at the Winter Palace. She wears silk trousers and a matching shirt: black. (She should always wear black, except when she wears white. Or jungle green.) She is tiny, ageless, with a minotaur face that is probably on an ancient coin somewhere. Those improbable lips, those eyes – somehow it all works. There is the hair, no longer mermaid-length, now a blunt, wavy bob, but still nuclear blonde. She talks too fast. Unlike the stony icon depicted in her 1990s portraits, she is vibrant, funny, irrepressi­ble. She is also smart as a whip.

What is power to you? “Real power means influencin­g a new generation. People ask what I do in my private life, and I reply: ‘At this point, there is nothing private in my life. I want to give. Give everything I learned, gained, in the period since Gianni was no more. I try to work as much as possible with young designers, show them our archive, and when I see their expression­s – when they see these clothes, this workmanshi­p, as if they were in Wonderland – that is power to me. I don’t say I understand the language of young people, but I see that on social media they have another way of talking, a kind of dialectica­l discussion. I understand from this that they are not conformist­s like we were. It is super-important for me to have influence in this world, even though I did not grow up with it.” So social media has changed your life? “Yes. I used to have this image that was very cold, offputting. People didn’t feel close to me. Now it is different. They see that can be open, laughing, joking on Instagram. Social media has become essential to my work, because fashion is a blend of many things: what young people are doing, what they would like to do, their dreams. I absorb all this informatio­n and then I present it as fashion. Versace clothes are more wearable now because life has changed. I am making clothes for women all over the world. I cast different kinds of models on my catwalk because there is not just one kind of woman. You can’t make a revolution for just one woman!” Who chose Michelle Obama’s famous Versace dress for the state dinner? “She did. She is a woman who knows what she wants. The speeches she made during Hillary’s campaign should be written down – they make up a philosophy of life. If she ever ran for president she would win.” What were you like as a little girl? “I was never a little girl. My brother Gianni would dress me and I would go out with a ciré jacket, a patent leather mini-skirt and tall boots.” When did you become aware of the power of style? “I only truly understood it recently, in the last five or six years. Before that I felt I had to produce the ‘right’ kind of Versace collection. But now I am designing for a woman who works, who has children – or maybe she doesn’t work, but she definitely has power. The power to keep on going forward. I have to succeed in showing women that we can do more, that we are stronger than men. Men, well, they get a project in life – say, they want to be CEO – and they get there and it’s over. Women are more open. They arrive at a certain point and they still want to go on. Men have other strengths, of course. But we have more courage.”

 ??  ?? The designer at work in her atelier.
The designer at work in her atelier.

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