Kuwait Times

Vatican, Versace and Vogue team up for Met’s spring exhibit

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The Vatican, Versace and Vogue are joining forces to show off the Catholic influences in fashion. The Vatican’s culture minister joined Donatella Versace and Vogue’s Anna Wintour on Monday to offer sneak peek of gorgeous Vatican liturgical vestments, jeweled miters and historic papal tiaras that will star in a spring exhibit at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York.

“Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imaginatio­n” opens May 10 and represents the most extensive exhibit of the museum’s Costume Institute, officials said. It also represents the first time some of the Vatican’s most precious treasures from the Sistine Chapel sacristy are being exhibited outside the Vatican. Along with the papal treasures, the Met show includes garments for more ordinary mortals by designers spanning Azzedine Alia to Vivienne Westwood, all set against the backdrop of the Met’s collection of medieval and religious artwork.

“Some might consider fashion to be an unfitting or unseemly medium by which to engage with ideas about the sacred or the divine,” curator Andrew Bolton told a crowd of Roman fashionist­as and journalist­s. “But dress is central to any discussion about religion. It affirms religious allegiance­s and, by extension, it asserts religious difference­s.” The exhibit, featuring some 40 Vatican vestments and accessorie­s spanning 15 papacies, will be spread among various Met galleries as well as the Cloisters branch in upper Manhattan in what organizers called a planned “pilgrimage” blending fashion, faith and art.

With Ennio Morricone’s soundtrack for “The Mission” playing in the background, visitors on Monday were able to glimpse a small sampling of the soon-to-be-shipped Vatican bling: The white silk cape embroidere­d with gold thread that once belonged to Pope Benedict XV, and the emerald, sapphire and diamond-studded miter, or pointed bishops’ hat, of Pope Leo XIII. They were put on display at the Palazzo Colonna, a former papal residence in downtown Rome that is a jewel of the Roman Baroque period.

Wearing a cardinal-appropriat­e red and black velvet tunic dress, Wintour, for whom Costume Institute’s space was renamed, said the exhibit shows the influence of the papacy over millennia. “Part of the power of the church has been how they look, and how they dress,” Wintour told The Associated Press. “They have this extraordin­ary presence.”—

 ??  ?? (From left) Italian designer Donatella Versace poses on February 26, 2018, with editor-in-chief of Vogue Anna Wintour and cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, President of the Vatican Pontifical Council for Culture, at Rome’s Palazzo Colonna at the end of the...
(From left) Italian designer Donatella Versace poses on February 26, 2018, with editor-in-chief of Vogue Anna Wintour and cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, President of the Vatican Pontifical Council for Culture, at Rome’s Palazzo Colonna at the end of the...
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Italian designer Donatella Versace (left) and Valentino’s creative director Pierpaolo Piccioli arrive at Rome’s Palazzo Colonna for a press conference to present the exhibition “Fashion and the Catholic Imaginatio­n” that will run at the New York MET.
— AFP photos Italian designer Donatella Versace (left) and Valentino’s creative director Pierpaolo Piccioli arrive at Rome’s Palazzo Colonna for a press conference to present the exhibition “Fashion and the Catholic Imaginatio­n” that will run at the New York MET.

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