From its initial debut in 2005 Paris, Giorgio Armani Privé, has been Armani’s signature reign within the haute couture utopia.
The exhibit, personally curated by Armani, bestows his esteemed 20-year haute couture legacy in Milan. It is the first time Armani’s haute couture creations will be showcased at the core of the label’s origination and formulation within its 50-year legacy.
While waiting in line to enter the space, visitors can discern the exhibit’s moonlit appeal. At an opening glance, visitors are addressed by a shimmering black tulle gown with exaggerated puff sleeves. A gown that exerts dreamlike femininity as it illuminates the front and center of the spacious opening.
The adjoining area sustains the foregoing theme with two cream gowns from Armani’s Spring/Summer 2010 collection. A strapless dress with an eccentric bottom structure, stuck out to face the lit crescent while one of a comparable structure is positioned further ahead. The dominant dress possesses a godly broad off-shoulder with a draped mermaid flow bottom. The off-shoulder illusion is flattered by a rounded collar bone choker in the shape of a crescent.
It’s implicit that Armani cherishes his 2010 Spring/Summer collection for its vast redundancy and sway on the exhibit’s theme. The gowns selected assert a mixture of widened boxy shoulders, a vast shimmer, moon like metallic, a pitch black shade, and multiple crescent garnishings.
As the exhibition carries on, there is an increase in black evening gowns exhibiting plenty of playful elements. For instance, a strapless ballgown streaked with diamond horizontal lines across its ruffles. Another drawn-out dress is shown as a strapless maxi with a spread-out silver sequin shine and a compatible clunky crescent necklace to pay tribute to the starry evening.
Armani’s realm contains separate black evening wear besides dresses, like a studded skin-tight low v-neck tank paired with a black maxi skirt with silver floral embellishment of the identical shade. The two-piece evening set is from the Armani 2009-2010 Autumn/Winter collection.
The zone of black evening wear was concluded with two singularly standing garments. One piece maintained the common stylistic element of a strapless sweetheart top. The gown was traced with alluring gems, a stuck-out waist, and fine-drawn silver lines proportional to the dramatic waist. A dress that is utterly ideal for a red carpet appearance.
The consequent piece holds dominance with its rich velveteen texture and a caved-in white maxi skirt on the front side. The piece stuck out widely at the hip and both colors meshed together toward the ankle. The embodiment of the white and black contrast is joined with a refined diamond line; a slight avant-garde experimentation of a traditional cocktail dress.
The assortment holds a considerable batch of red carpet looks worn by A-list clientele such as Nicole Kidman, Cate Blanchett, and Anne Hathaway.
Cate Blanchett is a recurring name behind Armani’s exclusive custom-made gowns. One piece poses a freely draped sheer diamond covering. Another classic dress exerts divine wealth through a minimal black long-sleeve with exaggerated pearls draping over an open back.
The collection succeeds with vast evening wear in an expanded color palette besides ivory. Many replicate a mermaid silhouette with strapless sweetheart tops.
In general, the selection utilizes a fixed array of colors (predominately black and cream with some variation), material (silk and velvet), and garnishing (gems, sequins, pearls, etc). Despite this, each guise is marked. Furthermore, separate pieces can be distinguished through the usage of perky ruffles and styled tilted newsboys.
Near the finale of the ground floor, two gowns side by side test out Armani’s shade usage outside of traditional neutrals: a silky and pearl-like baby pink, and gold scintillante lined with diamond. The gold scintillante holds a thick diamond choker and the pink gown asserts distinction with a sizable pearl ball chest above the chest. The looks establish a dreamlike vision to wear side by side at a red carpet-show.
The exhibition bestowed Armani’s esteemed prestige for luxurious pastels. Gowns are luxuriously discerned as an Armani solely based on a glance.
The entirety of the collection held the prestined designer’s prime works. Garments from his early development in haute couture (late 2000’s circa) up until one of the latest runways for Autumn/Winter 2024-25.
Every garment apart from the candid reflection of Armani’s self-curated dream, serves as a muse for its visitors and their very own wonders.
“In my Haute Couture collections, I express my vision of style and elegance through the art of craftsmanship and savoir-faire: only here am I free to do so without limits. Now, I want to share it with a wider audience, inviting them into this dream of mine, a dream of dresses woven from imagination and grace.” -Giorgio Armani
To conclude the exhibit, there is an Armani Bookshop in ere of the exit. The sizable shop sells voguish-illustrated silhouettes on magnets, postcards, and mugs. There is a substantial offering of pens and journals to trigger design inspiration too. An Armani X Moleskine collaboration features a selection of small, medium, and large journals in black and beige with “Armani Silos” engraved on the cover.
Moreover, the space contains a ground floor café interwoven within the exhibition and a digital archive on the third floor. The archive holds fashion show recordings, renowned print advertisements, and sketches. Armani grants his archive accessible to the public.
The Giorgio Armani Privé will run from May 21st-December 28th 2025. The exhibit is located on via Bergognone, 40 Milan, Italy, and operates all days of the week except Monday and Tuesday.
Text & Photos by Isabelle Exsted