The Philippine Star

MARCO BIGGIOGERO IS KNIGHTED WITH THE STAR OF ITALY

My lips are sealed... sometimes

- MAURICE ARCACHE PHOTOS BY ALEX VAN HAGEN POWERED BY MAC CENTER

The simpatico señor Marco Biggiogero recently received the Cavaliere dell’ordine della stella d’ Italia, which is awarded to any person who has taken every effort and opportunit­y to preserve and promote Italy abroad through whatever field they are in. The award seeks to acknowledg­e those who have fostered stronger ties between Italy and other countries.

Biggiogero is the first Italian in the Philippine­s to receive the award from Italian Ambassador Giorgio Guglielmin­o, who thanked him for his numerous contributi­ons to promote Italy. He was knighted in a small but lavish ceremony in Boracay.

Biggiogero returned the appreciati­on, saying that while the Philippine­s is his home now, he will forever be Italian.

The Milan-born property veteran is a recognized leader in the real estate industry in the Philippine­s and is the director for hotel and leisure for KMC Savills. He has been based in the Philippine­s since 2003 when he came over to spearhead a project in Boracay. Ever since he stepped foot on the white, sandy shores, Biggiogero knew that that was where he wanted to be.

“I had planned to visit just for vacation, but fell in love with the place and decided to use my property experience to explore business opportunit­ies,” he said.

Boracay has been his home for more than a decade. In that time, he has developed several projects in Boracay, which continue to be the benchmark for developers coming to invest in the island. His intuition, foresight and expertise has also allowed his projects to gain internatio­nal recognitio­n, such as the 2010 B.I.D. Internatio­nal Star Award for Quality in Geneva and Tripadviso­r’s 2013 Traveller’s Choice, among others, tesoros (“darling” in Italian).

The islands, he says, are the perfect mix of local and foreign people. Biggiogero has made it his mission to incorporat­e both Philippine and Italian designs in his projects. Either way, you know which properties have been touched by his hands. They are homes away from Italian homes and are incredibly innovative yet warm.

“Boracay has developed its unique character due to its perfect blend of foreigners and locals living and loving the island. Real estate prices here are more affordable here than in places such as Phuket or Bali. Investors can still aim for an optimum capital gain as well as good rental returns, especially if their investment is properly managed,” he adds.

Bravo, señor Biggiogero!

Haute couture should be fun, foolish and almost unwearable,” the French couturier Christian Lacroix reportedly said in 1987. That seems such a long time ago, more so after all that has happened in the past year. With even prêt-à-porter sales on a steady decline, can this venerable art of producing the finest clothes requiring thousands of hours of design, craft, and constructi­on, still get away with such frivolity? Are the bastions of oldschool Parisian fashion still relevant, or do they even have a future in 2021 and beyond?

Haute couture’s fashion greats seem to think so as they confidentl­y pushed on with their January shows, albeit virtually or audience-free because of COVID restrictio­ns in France.

In the case of Giambattis­ta Valli, whose gowns typically require 6,000 meters of fabric and 240 hours to make, there was no compromise when it came to fun, as he unveiled endless miles of ruffled taffeta and tulle in tiers of sumptuous ball gowns, coats and capes that stretched all the way to Seville, where his heart went aflutter this season to flamenco beats that his beribboned señoritas sashayed to with their strappy heels. In red, black, white and pink, the pieces were in his trademark voluminous silhouette­s.

“Couture is not about decoration, it’s about volumes,” says the designer. “You have to be a sculptor.” His video featured a model with a bouffant hairstyle inspired by ’60s images of Benedetta Barzini and Marisa Berenson together with a male dancer, “a divine messenger descending from Olympus to earth to infuse the spirits with wisdom, goodness and elegance.” Clothes are juxtaposed with houses, simulating a dreamlike journey as well as a dialogue between spaces and clothes, a coming together of cultures since “Seville is a place where the Spanish and Islamic cultures melt together and create a third culture.”

For Christian Dior’s Maria Grazia Chiuri, divining the future of couture is in the 15th-century tarot cards created for the Duke of Milan. The superstiti­ous founder of the house actually believed in the tarot that helped him locate his sister, a member of the French Resistance, who disappeare­d.

For these difficult times, Chiuri believes that “something magical can help us, to help us think better.” She asked director Matteo Garrone to produce a short film about a girl who enters the Moorish Revival castle of Sammezzano, where she goes through a labyrinthi­ne journey to find herself, encounteri­ng the icons of the cards, from High Priestess to Temperance, Justice and Death, all dressed in Renaissanc­e-inspired gowns with high-waisted corseted bodices in opulent brocade, and robes in precious hues with rich embroideri­es, contrastin­g with contempora­ry streamline­d separates.

Kim Jones, for his debut collection at Fendi, also went on a journey — from England to Rome, through a labyrinth of glass, as inspired by Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, the time-traveling tale of androgynou­s transforma­tion that he channeled through hybrid ensembles of half-blazer and half-evening gown as well as hourglass suits on male models with the reddest lipstick.

The women were in slinky 1930s Vionnet silhouette­s and regal gowns caped in long trains. Frescoes from Charleston, the 16th-century Bloomsbury retreat in Sussex, appeared in beading, while the marbles of Galleria Borghese were seen as painted tailoring. The sculptures of Bernini were evoked in the draping.

At Chanel, Virginie Viard’s journey was to a village wedding in the South of France, recreated with arches of flowers and wooden chairs. The mothers had little suits in tweed and lace or skinny embroidere­d cardigans. The boys or girls dressed à la garçonne in old-fashioned boys’ clothes like waistcoats that recall Coco Chanel’s wearing of her lovers’ garments and her appropriat­ion of menswear in her designs.

The guests are a little more daring, with lace jumpsuits or tweed coats paired with flouncy skirts ready to twirl around the town square to the beat of Gipsy Kings, who were invited to perform. Viard’s cuts are simple but with an emphasis on detail and craftsmans­hip from allied ateliers like Lesage, Vernoux, Hurel and Montex for embroidery; handpainte­d lace from Solstiss; and silk flowers from Lemarié.

Pierpaolo Piccioli at Valentino, on the other hand, did not offer any stories, declaring that “the narrative of the collection is the collection itself.” He said he wanted to work on surfaces, “not in a decorative sense, but workmanshi­p which becomes the surface itself.”

Thus, his clothes at first glance look like wearable RTW but with the finest fabrics and hand-finished tailoring — a kind of effortless, casual couture with genderless trench coats, hoodies, sweaters, board shorts and camisoles contrastin­g with latticed and lurex-fringed coats and sculptural capes. At Schiaparel­li, Texan designer Daniel Roseberry wanted to take the stuffiness out of haute couture clichés of fragile women in delicate lace through statement pieces for empowered women, incorporat­ed in ensembles like a Madonnaand-child gold breastplat­e or a leather-embossed superheroi­ne muscled torso with a matching bag. A molded bustier in glossy black is paired with a giant bow in the founder’s shocking pink. A stretch fabric dress is knitted with 200,000 Swarovski crystals.

With less embellishe­d pieces, he makes use of volume like a black column dress with huge folded sleeves. It’s what he calls “the joy of peacocking through clothes that make you aware of the fact of your body, that make you think of how you move in the world.”

Iris Van Herpen brings couture to the future with one-off pieces created through technology, particular­ly 3D printing. Inspired by Entangled Life, the book by Merlin Sheldrake on how fungi sustain life on earth, she used pleating that recalled the gills of mushrooms and created silhouette­s and embellishm­ents that channeled mycelium, the lace-like branches of fungus that forms a “wood-wide web” or undergroun­d system of communicat­ion — a metaphor that is so meaningful during these times of isolation. For Viktor & Rolf, couture took the form of a “rave” with a gritty edge that transporte­d viewers to a “fantasy land of lightheart­ed escape.” Pieces from various garments were upcycled with “traditiona­lly beautiful references put into a raw, young context.” The mood, they said, is “irreverent and almost casual but always elegant: an antidote to doom scrolling.” Not so sure about the elegance, but the quirky parade can be quite entertaini­ng during lockdown. But will the targeted audience of .001 percent (around 4,000 worldwide) buy them? For that segment, money is no object just to acquire something truly special. Demand for men’s bespoke suits, for example, have gone up versus the slump in sales of the RTW variety, according to Alex Fury, author and fashion critic of AnOther magazine and The Financial Times, who was talking to people in the industry at the recent shows. Giambattis­ta Valli says he has “very extraordin­ary Chinese clients who are looking for these statement moments” and “it’s working well in the Middle East and there’s commitment in Europe.” Of course, people will always want to dress up. Just when the lockdown eased up momentaril­y in New York, Ruba AbuNimah, Revlon creative director, noted how everyone was all dolled up, dressed in heels and clubwear, even just to eat at outdoor restaurant­s: “They looked almost ridiculous but then, you know, I could feel their pain.”

 ??  ?? The amazing duo: Italian Ambassador Giorgio Guglielmin­o presents the Cavaliere dell'ordine della stella d’ Italia to Marco Biggiogero for promoting Italian business culture in the Philippine­s.
The amazing duo: Italian Ambassador Giorgio Guglielmin­o presents the Cavaliere dell'ordine della stella d’ Italia to Marco Biggiogero for promoting Italian business culture in the Philippine­s.
 ??  ?? The Biggiogero­s: Marco with Mario, Marian and Leone Biggiogero and JoAnn Tecson
The Biggiogero­s: Marco with Mario, Marian and Leone Biggiogero and JoAnn Tecson
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Amanda Tirol, Nenette Tirol, Sasha Tirol and RADM Leonard Tirol, PCGA
Amanda Tirol, Nenette Tirol, Sasha Tirol and RADM Leonard Tirol, PCGA
 ??  ?? Susanne Trischberg­er
Susanne Trischberg­er
 ??  ?? Freida Dario-Santiago
Freida Dario-Santiago
 ??  ?? Leopold Tirol
Leopold Tirol
 ??  ?? Ailene Co
Ailene Co
 ?? (Elina Kechicheva/Christian Dior) ?? Christian Dior: For Maria Grazia Chiuri, divining the future of couture is in the 15th-century tarot cards created for the Duke of Milan.
(Elina Kechicheva/Christian Dior) Christian Dior: For Maria Grazia Chiuri, divining the future of couture is in the 15th-century tarot cards created for the Duke of Milan.
 ?? (Courtesy of Giambattis­ta Valli) ?? Giambattis­ta Valli: There was no compromise when it came to fun, as he unveiled endless miles of ruffled taffeta and tulle.
(Courtesy of Giambattis­ta Valli) Giambattis­ta Valli: There was no compromise when it came to fun, as he unveiled endless miles of ruffled taffeta and tulle.
 ?? (Gio Staiano/Iris Van Herpen) ?? Iris Van Herpen brings couture to the future with one-off pieces created through technology, particular­ly 3D printing.
(Gio Staiano/Iris Van Herpen) Iris Van Herpen brings couture to the future with one-off pieces created through technology, particular­ly 3D printing.
 ?? (Photos courtesy of Chanel) ?? Chanel: Virginie Viard’s journey was to a village wedding in the South of France.
(Photos courtesy of Chanel) Chanel: Virginie Viard’s journey was to a village wedding in the South of France.
 ?? (Courtesy of Fendi) ?? Fendi: For his debut collection, Kim Jones went on a journey — from England to Rome.
(Courtesy of Fendi) Fendi: For his debut collection, Kim Jones went on a journey — from England to Rome.
 ?? (Courtesy of Valentino) ?? Valentino: Pierpaolo Piccioli did not offer any stories, declaring that “the narrative of the collection is the collection itself.”
(Courtesy of Valentino) Valentino: Pierpaolo Piccioli did not offer any stories, declaring that “the narrative of the collection is the collection itself.”
 ?? (Team Peter Stigter/Viktor & Rolf) ?? Viktor & Rolf: Couture took the form of a “rave,” with a gritty edge that transporte­d viewers to a “fantasy land of lightheart­ed escape.”
(Team Peter Stigter/Viktor & Rolf) Viktor & Rolf: Couture took the form of a “rave,” with a gritty edge that transporte­d viewers to a “fantasy land of lightheart­ed escape.”
 ?? (Daniel Roseberry/Schiaparel­li) ?? Schiaparel­li: Texan designer Daniel Roseberry wanted to take the stuffiness out of haute couture through statement pieces for empowered women.
(Daniel Roseberry/Schiaparel­li) Schiaparel­li: Texan designer Daniel Roseberry wanted to take the stuffiness out of haute couture through statement pieces for empowered women.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? art de vivre
art de vivre

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