Vincenzo Ferdinandi
Some of this article's listed sources may not be reliable. (March 2020) |
Vincenzo Ferdinandi | |
---|---|
Born | 1920 |
Died | 1990 |
Occupation | fashion designer |
Vincenzo Ferdinandi (Newark, 29 November 1920 - Rome, 22 April 1990) was an Italian designer among the founders of Italian Haute couture.[1][2]
Biography[]
Born in the United States, he moved to Italy in the early fifties to open an atelier in Rome in the highly fashionable Via Veneto.[3]
He was among the first great haute couture designers to compete with the most renowned French couturiers in the international arena. In 1949 he was in Paris, called by Christian Dior for a stylistic collaboration with the French maison. After that experience, London also called him to design a line of shoes that he completed with creativity and all-Italian creativity[4]
Together with other names of the Italian fashion of the time such as Roberto Capucci, the Sartoria Antonelli, the atelier Carosa, Giovannelli-Sciarra, Germana Marucelli, Polinober, the Sartoria Vanna and Jole Veneziani, he participated in 1952 in the first historical parade at the Sala Bianca in Palazzo Pitti in Florence. A very young Oriana Fallaci sent by the weekly Epoca told the news[5][6]
In 1953, together with other major names of the time (including Emilio Schuberth, the Sorelle Fontana, Alberto Fabiani, Jole Veneziani, Giovannelli-Sciarra, Mingolini-Guggenheim, Eleonora Garnett, Simonetta), he founded the SIAM - [7] (later to become the National Chamber of Italian Fashion). In July 1954, together with the Sorelle Fontana, Emilio Schuberth, Giovannelli Sciarra, Garnett and Mingolini-Guggenheim he took part in "Alta Moda in Castel Sant'Angelo". On that occasion, the American Sally Kirkland,[8] Fashion Editor of Life and of Vogue, was awarded for her role as ambassador of Italian fashion in the United States.
Defying the conventions of the time (it was in the early fifties), he is the first to show an afro-American girl in a fashion parade, the young model Dolores Francine Rhiney.[9][10] His creations are worn by actresses and famous women of those years. Jennifer Jones, May Britt,[11] Virna Lisi, Sylva Koscina, , Eloisa Cianni,[12] Lucia Bosè, Lilli Cerasoli,[13][14] Ivy Nicholson,[15] Loredana Pavone,[16][17][18] Joe Patterson,[19] Anna Maria Ghislanzoni, Marta Marzotto and a very young Elsa Martinelli[20] are some of these[21]
In 2014, the Maxxi museum in Rome as part of the "Bellissima"[22] exhibition numbers him among the pioneers of Italian fashion[23]
References[]
- ^ "Ferdinandi, Vincenzo nell'Enciclopedia Treccani". www.treccani.it.
- ^ "Ferdinandi Vincenzo | Archivi della moda del novecento".
- ^ https://storage.googleapis.com/ferdinandi/images/1.jpg
- ^ https://storage.googleapis.com/ferdinandi/images/53.jpg
- ^ "Epoca n.95/1952" (PDF).
- ^ "Fallaci". September 27, 2015.
- ^ "Sindacato Italiano Alta Moda". October 30, 2013.
- ^ "Zoe Fontana, Vincenzo Ferdinandi, Sally Kirkland, Emilio Schuberth and Alice Parkings at Castel Sant'Angelo".
- ^ "Vincenzo Ferdinandi and Francine Rhiney in 1952".
- ^ "Donyale". February 25, 2011.
- ^ "Ferdinandi and May Britt".
- ^ "Miss Italy 1953 Eloisa Cianni and Ferdinandi".
- ^ "Lilli Cerasoli and Vincenzo Ferdinandi - 1953".
- ^ "cover of Bella - Lilli Cerasoli with a Ferdinandi model".
- ^ "Ivy Nicholson in red tailleur".
- ^ https://storage.googleapis.com/ferdinandi/images/37.jpg
- ^ "Loredana Pavone wearing tailleur, hat and gloves by Ferdinandi- 1954".
- ^ "Italian Collections Notebook | Vogue | September 15, 1952". Vogue | The Complete Archive.
- ^ https://storage.googleapis.com/ferdinandi/images/26.jpg
- ^ https://storage.googleapis.com/ferdinandi/images/59.jpg
- ^ "#tailleurferdinandi Instagram posts - Ispics.com". ispics.com.
- ^ "Maxxi Museum - Bellissima".
- ^ "news".
Further reading[]
- Giovanna Motta, Antonello Biagini (11 June 2018). Fashion through History: Costumes, Symbols, Communication (Volume 2). Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 11 giu 2018. ISBN 9781527511965.
- Guido Vergani. The Sala Bianca: The Birth of Italian Fashion. Electa, Milan, 1992.
- Bellissima - Italy and High Fashion. Mondadori Electa, 2014.
External links[]
- 1920 births
- 1990 deaths
- Fashion designers from Rome
- People from Newark, New Jersey
- American emigrants to Italy