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Milan Men's Fashion Week SS18 Moodboard

The art & designed elements that inspired Milan's SS18 collection

Milan Men's Fashion Week SS18 Moodboard The art & designed elements that inspired Milan's SS18 collection
Neil Barrett - Donald Judd, Untitled 1968

Neil Barrett - Donald Judd, Untitled 1968

Dirk Bikkembergs - Brutalist architecture: Geisel library by William Pereira

Dirk Bikkembergs - Brutalist architecture: Geisel library by William Pereira

Daks - 1905 young man’s portrait by Henry Mayson

Daks - 1905 young man’s portrait by Henry Mayson

Fendi – Martin Parr from Common Sense series

Fendi – Martin Parr from Common Sense series

Salvatore Ferragamo – Alain Delon in “Plein Soleil”

Salvatore Ferragamo – Alain Delon in “Plein Soleil”

Marni - Magdalena Suarez’s art

Marni - Magdalena Suarez’s art

MSGM – detail from Burning Man Festival in Nevada

MSGM – detail from Burning Man Festival in Nevada

N°21 - Bruce Weber’s Eighties photos

N°21 - Bruce Weber’s Eighties photos

Palm Angels - The Huntington Beach Surf Riot in 1986

Palm Angels - The Huntington Beach Surf Riot in 1986

Prada - Ollie Schrauwen’s comics

Prada - Ollie Schrauwen’s comics

Prada – Thayaht

Prada – Thayaht

There is a desire for fun, sun, sea, and relaxation in the last Milan Men's Fashion Week.

Many designers tell it, and most of all, the collections they have presented in the past few days tell it. From MSGM to No. 21, from Marcelo Burlon to Palm Angels, many in fact let themselves be conquered by the surfer or chic style of the Riviera, adapting to the codes of their brand.

But if every garment is the window on a world, the fragment of a story that can lead to unexplored territories, then there is much beyond the beach.

Massimo Giorgetti starts from Venice Beach and arrives in Mexico, through the rave parties in the Nevada desert; Armani flies to Japan and Christian Pellizzari to Venice; while Versace, choose to travel through the history of its brand. Dirk Bikkembergs rediscovers the brutalist architecture and Neil Barrett works by Donald Judd; Diesel Balck Gold reworks in a contemporary way grunge style, Daks the Victorian one with blazers and boater straw hat typical of the Henley Royal Regatta. Marni seeks to transform into clothes the whims of a child and Prada to explore the human side of comics and graphic novels. Salvatore Ferragamo and Fendi take us to the movies to see Talented Mr. Ripley and the 60s film starring Alain Delon Plein Soleil.

 

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Choose a brand and enjoy the ride and the story you bring with it.

 

Art & Design

 

Fendi – Martin Parr from Common Sense series

Fendi – Martin Parr from Common Sense series

N°21 - Bruce Weber’s Eighties photos

N°21 - Bruce Weber’s Eighties photos

 
Prada - Ollie Schrauwen’s comics

Prada - Ollie Schrauwen’s comics

Dirk Bikkembergs - Brutalist architecture: Geisel library by William Pereira

Dirk Bikkembergs - Brutalist architecture: Geisel library by William Pereira

Prada – Thayaht

Prada – Thayaht

Neil Barrett - Donald Judd, Untitled 1968

Neil Barrett - Donald Judd, Untitled 1968

 

An homage to

 

 

Palm Angels - The Huntington Beach Surf Riot in 1986

Palm Angels - The Huntington Beach Surf Riot in 1986

MSGM – detail from Burning Man Festival in Nevada

MSGM – detail from Burning Man Festival in Nevada

Marni - Magdalena Suarez’s art

Marni - Magdalena Suarez’s art

Salvatore Ferragamo – Alain Delon in “Plein Soleil”

Salvatore Ferragamo – Alain Delon in “Plein Soleil”

Daks - 1905 young man’s portrait by Henry Mayson

Daks - 1905 young man’s portrait by Henry Mayson