Subversive designs, avant-garde fabrics - from tweed to rhodophane - iconic and surreal creations like her Shoe hat or her Tear dress, created in collaboration with Salvador Dalí, an evening dress inspired by the form of a tear with a trompe-l’œil print. Welcome to the universe of Elsa Schiaparelli, one of the most extraordinary couturiers of the XX Century with her extravagant creations so inextricably connected with the art world. Dresses inspired by Botticelli, Venetian cloaks with taffeta hoods, black gloves bedecked with red pythons, rings, gold claws and stitches, inspired by the works of Man Ray. And hats like sculptures, of felt and velvet, inspired by painting, theatre, the opera. However, this illuminated woman who went by the surname of Schiap, speaking of herself in the third person, was famed, above all, for her sweaters. Such as the black one she created in 1927 with a white bow, guarded today, along with other creations by Elsa, in the Collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum, such as the evening coat designed by Jean Cocteau or the summer evening dress, part of the Parachute Collection. The famed black sweater was one of the first designs of the Italian stylist who later made France her home and even invented “shocking pink”. “Deeply convinced to be rather glamorous, I wore it to a smart lunch and it was a success. All the women wanted one immediately,” her biography Shocking Life states. In fact, lauded by Vogue, the sweater was immediately duplicated.
Hurvin Anderson’s first major retrospective explores twenty-five years of painting between England and Jamaica, memory and modernity, and brings together over sixty paintings by the British artist, ranging from nostalgic interiors to saturated landscapes, through a profound reflection on identity and belonging.
White Cube in London hosts the first UK solo exhibition of Sara Flores, a Shipibo-Conibo artist from the Peruvian Amazon. Her works blend ancestral art, spirituality, and environmental activism. The show weaves Kené patterns, natural materials, and shamanic visions into a contemporary language.
The King’s Tour Artists: A Visual Story of 40 Years of Royal Travel
Buckingham Palace opens its State Rooms to host The King’s Tour Artists, with over 70 works, many never seen before, by official artists who accompanied Charles III on his travels.
An exhibition celebrates Edwin Austin Abbey, a 19th-century American artist, showcasing his study for the monumental work The Hours created for the Pennsylvania State Capitol.