Madonna

Madonna’s Best Style Moments—In Honor of Her 40 Years in Music

Madonna’s Best Style Moments—In Honor of Her 40 Years in Music

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40 years ago, Madonna burst onto the music scene with her first self-titled album—changing the pop landscape forever with her mega-hits such as “Holiday” and “Lucky Star.” There are few musical artists who can say they began their career by simultaneously igniting a whole new fashion craze, but it’s precisely what the singer did back in 1983. Fans were totally obsessed with Madonna’s signature tulle skirts, big bow’d hairstyles, and lace gloves from the get-go. Madonna wasn’t just a hot new artist to watch, then—she became a global trendsetter. And she’s continued to be for four decades now. So, in honor, Vogue is taking a look back on 30 of her best fashion moments throughout her career.
Over her impressive 40-year career, Madonna has only continued to deliver show-stopping ensembles—be it on stage, on the red carpet, or in her many music videos. Nobody does “fashion eras” better than the star. With each new album she’s released, Madonna has always embraced a brand new look to go with it—whether it be her western-inspired getups for 2000’s Music, or her disco-ready attire for 2005’s Confessions on a Dance Floor. Like a true artist, she sees what she wears as true performance art. Remember at the 1996 premiere of Evita, when she channeled her character, Evita Péron, in Givenchy, gigantic floral headpiece and all? Pure camp!
Along the way, Madonna has delivered plenty of other looks that people still talk about today. The Jean Paul Gaultier cone look she wore for her “Blonde Ambition” tour in 1990, for one, is still one of her most iconic moments to date. When the superstar headlined the Super Bowl halftime show in 2012, then-Givenchy designer Riccardo Tisci and famous milliner Philip Treacy created a regal, gold-and-black ensemble that totally stole the show. More recently, she also appeared at the 2021 VMAs in a leather bodysuit. “They said we wouldn’t last,” she saucily told the crowd, “but we’re still here.”

Below, explore some of Madonna’s best fashion moments over the years.
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Originally published in Vogue.com

Madonna Looks Back on Her ‘Like a Virgin’ Wardrobe Mishap at Inaugural MTV VMAs on ‘Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon’

Madonna Looks Back on Her ‘Like a Virgin’ Wardrobe Mishap at Inaugural MTV VMAs on ‘Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon’

Madonna is looking back at one of the biggest moments of her career.On Wednesday, the pop music icon appeared on an episode of “The Tonight Show” where she discussed her newest album, “Finally Enough Love: 50 Number Ones,” her birthday grillz and the controversy surrounding her hit ‘80s song, “Like a Virgin.”
The show’s host, Jimmy Fallon, brought up that the song was almost not the lead single for the 1984 album of the same name as apparently the producer, Nile Rodgers, wanted it to be “Material Girl” instead.
Madonna, wearing a top by R13 and baggy blue pants paired with lace fingerless gloves, affirmed that, but claimed the real controversy was regarding her performance of “Like a Virgin” at the inaugural MTV Video Music Awards in 1984.

Madonna on “The Tonight Show” with host Jimmy Fallon.

Todd Owyoung/NBC

“I did that show and I walked down these very steep stairs of a wedding cake,” Madonna explained. “I got to the bottom and I start dancing around and my white stiletto pumps fell off, and I was trying to do this smooth move, like dive for the shoe and make it look like it was choreography. My dress flipped up and my butt was showing. Can you imagine?”

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Fallon laughed hysterically as Madonna smiled and rolled her eyes at the memory.
She added, “Those were the days when you shouldn’t show your butt to have a career. Now it’s the opposite. But it happened by accident, and I didn’t even know my butt was showing. It wasn’t even the whole butt, it was just like a butt cheek, like half of a butt cheek.”
“Enough butt to cause a controversy?” Fallon asked.
Then Madonna said that after the performance, she went backstage and her manager stated her career was over.
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The two then discussed her embellished birthday grillz, which she claims she’s worn for decades, and what she thinks she would be if she wasn’t in the career she is today, to which she responded she’d most probably be a school teacher.
Later on in the segment, Madonna gifted Fallon a mini embellished handbag with a chain with the word “Butch” emblazoned on it.
“Watch out, butch is coming through,” he yelled, as Madonna and the audience members laughed.

Emma Stone’s Elie Saab Dress is the Star of Sotheby’s Auction to Support Beirut

Emma Stone’s Elie Saab Dress is the Star of Sotheby’s Auction to Support Beirut

The custom-made Elie Saab dress, worn by actor Emma Stone to the 2015 Oscars, is available at Sotheby’s To Beirut with Love auction. Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby’s

Sotheby’s has announced its plans for a charitable auction in order to raise funds for Beirut. The auction, titled To Beirut with Love will feature a handful of extraordinary items, including a custom Elie Saab dress, worn by award-winning actor Emma Stone to the 2015 Oscars.
The British-founded auction house has partnered with two nonprofit organizations, Creatives for Lebanon and Art for Beirut to develop the To Beirut with Love initiative, in order to support those affected by the Beirut explosion. The sale will be open for bidding from December 7 to December 15, where a number of handpicked donations from iconic artists, celebrities, and fashion and jewelry designers will be on offer.
The star of the auction is noted to be a breathtaking gown by Lebanese couturier, Elie Saab. The pale-green sequined dress features an open back and a thigh-high slit and was worn by Stone, at the Oscars ceremony in 2015 where she was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role in Birdman. The stunning gown is estimated to sell for between £20,000 to £30,000 ($26,700 to $40,025).
A silk haute couture gown designed by Egyptian actor Sherihan, worn in her Thousand and One Nights Fawazeer show in 1987, is available in the To Beirut with Love auction. Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby’s

Other remarkable fashion items include singer Madonna‘s matador-inspired outfit created by Lebanese designer Nicolas Jebran; and Geri Halliwell’s sequinned number worn in the music video for the Spice Girl‘s debut single Wannabe. Additionally, a silk haute couture gown designed by Egyptian icon Sherihan, for her Thousand and One Nights Fawazeer show in 1987, has been donated alongside Lebanese singer Majida El Roumi‘s unique sky-blue embellished dress from her wardrobe collection.
Woven yellow gold My Dior cuff, designed by Victoire de Castellane. Photo: Courtesy of Sotherby’s

Leading the jewelry line-up is the unmissable My Dior cuff and British-artist Damien Hirst‘s gold pill bracelet with diamond skull. The eye-catching gold My Dior bracelet, designed by artistic director of Dior Joaillerie, Victoire de Castellane, features a dazzling array of diamonds and colored gemstones and is expected to generate at least £30,000 to £50,000 ($40,025 to $66,700). Elsewhere Hirst’s playful bracelet, created in 2015, reflects the theme of pharmaceuticals, which is often present in contemporary artist’s work.
Among many of the captivating artworks is a photograph taken from the Suit Egyptienne series by leading Lebanese photographer Fouad Elkoury. British supermodel Naomi Campbell has also donated one of her favorite portraits, an image of herself shot by photographers Rocco Lapasta and Charles DeCaro, that is estimated to sell for £3,000 to £5,000 ($4,000 to $6,671).
Portrait of model Naomi Campbell, photographed by Rocco Lapasta and Charles DeCaro. Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby’s

Sotheby’s has confirmed that all the proceeds from the auction will be shared among five charities that are providing relief to Beirut following the tragic port explosion in August. The five charities chosen by the initiative are Nusaned, Beit El Baraka, Baytna Baytak, Al Fanar, and House of Christmas.
“Lebanon is home to an artistic community whose contributions to the cultural landscape cannot be overstated,” says Sotheby’s chairman for the Middle East, Edward Gibbs. “The explosion in the port of Beirut this summer sent shockwaves through the city and the world, impacting every sector of society in Lebanon with countless tales of loss, damage, and displacement. Sotheby’s has come together with our partners to host the auction, To Beirut with Love, to provide much-needed relief and funds to aid the healing process.”
Read Next: These Are The 10 Most Influential Fashion Moments of 2020

EXCLUSIVE: Serbia Says ‘I Do’ to Gaultier Wedding Exhibition

EXCLUSIVE: Serbia Says ‘I Do’ to Gaultier Wedding Exhibition

With so many weddings scuppered by the pandemic, an exhibition opening in Belgrade later this month takes on an added poignancy.
“Love Is Love: Wedding Bliss for All à la Jean Paul Gaultier” puts the spotlight on 38 couture wedding looks created by the designer between 1990 and 2020, including eight not included in previous iterations of the exhibition, which debuted in 2017 at the Montreal Museum of Fine Art and traveled the following year to Buenos Aires.
View of the exhibition “Love Is Love: Wedding Bliss for All à la Jean Paul Gaultier” at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, 2017.  Denis Farley

The display at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Belgrade, or MoCAB, marks Gaultier’s first solo exhibition in Serbia, and the first display of haute couture for the institution, which was originally founded in 1958 and now located in a funky 1965 building shaped like shards of crystal.

It puts an exclamation point on a landmark year for the acclaimed French designer, who staged his final fashion show last January, and will hand the couture reins to a rotating cast of creatives, starting with Sacai’s Chitose Abe next January.
“A wedding dress traditionally closes a haute couture show, and the exhibition comes at the end of my haute couture career,” Gaultier told WWD on Monday. “The Serbian public will be able to see my work, my codes and my values through these bridal outfits. It is about love, it is about joy and it is about the dress that should be the most beautiful of your life.”

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Though not without something irreverent.
Gaultier has shown a bride cradling a baby; another shrouded in tulle with a groom dressed in a matching fisherman sweater, and another in fishnets, a spray of white flowers attached to the back of her bridal G-string.
Laetitia Casta in Jean Paul Gaultier Couture 2003  WWD Archive

“I come from a generation that was against marriage and that was anti-establishment, so when I presented the wedding dresses I tried to present them with humor or theatricality,” Gaultier explained.
He recalls how enthralled he was watching Madonna perform “Like a Virgin” at the MTV Video Music Awards in 1984, descending a tiered wedding-cake set wearing a bridal gown and veil, ultimately writhing on the floor and playing with the microphone in a suggestive way. “I liked her provocation and the way she made the wedding dress sexy,” Gaultier said.
Included in the Belgrade show is a dress with a 25-meter-long train that was featured in one of Gaultier ready-to-wear shows.
“The dress was part of the scenography, presented as a curtain hiding the backstage and only at the end of the show the audience realized that it was a wedding dress when the model came out of it and ripped the curtain apart,” he recounted.
Gaultier opened his couture house in 1997 and had Laetitia Casta wear the bridal look.
Jean Paul Gaultier backstage at his spring 2015 haute couture show.  Delphine Achard

“Since then, every couture show had a wedding dress at the end – except in 2015 when I started with a wedding dress and did a full show of just wedding dresses,” he said.
Thierry-Maxime Loriot, curator of the “Love Is Love” exhibition, said it demonstrates how Gaultier laced his “creative and provocative work with humor” and exalts his “humanist vision of society as he embraced all cultures and subcultures without any taboos or judgment.”
The exhibition title, borrowing a phrase from then President Obama’s speech announcing the legalization of same-sex marriage in 2015, implies a conception of weddings inclusive of all configurations, questioning sexual, ethnic and religious conventions, Loriot noted.

“I feel this exhibition is important for the strong social message of freedom, tolerance and resilience it delivers,” he said. “For me, what is most important in ‘Love Is Love’ is that it is about fashion and tolerance.”
According to Viktor Kiš, acting director of the Belgrade museum, the circumstances created by the pandemic underscore the need for art that challenges people, and makes them think and feel.
“Gaultier is not a brand, but an idea of equality, support, diversity and tolerance, and if anyone ought to be fighting for tolerance in a society, it should be the artists,” he said. “Art is comprehensive, free, it allows for emotions, personal expression, provocation and critical thinking.”
Anna Cleveland on the runway at Jean Paul Gaultier’s spring 2015 haute couture show.  Giovanni Giannoni

The layout for the Serbian showcase was designed by the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, or FFMA, with mannequins provided by JoliCoeur International and animated by Denis Marleau and Stéphanie Jasmin from the Montreal avant-garde theater company UBU.
Gaultier’s initial collaboration with the MMFA began in 2011 with “The Fashion World of Jean Paul Gaultier: From Sidewalk to the Catwalk.” The retrospective traveled to 12 cities and was viewed by more than 2 million visitors between 2011 and 2016 — setting a record for a fashion exhibition.
The Belgrade display runs through March 2021 alongside the main exhibition showcasing recent acquisitions of the museum, dedicated largely to art from Serbia and the former Yugoslavia.
See Also:
Documentary Goes Behind the Scenes at Jean Paul Gaultier’s Farewell Show
EXCLUSIVE: Sacai to Design Jean Paul Gaultier’s Next Couture
With Weddings Being Canceled or Postponed, Bridal Designers, Manufacturers and Stores Are Left Scrambling

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