It was all in the workmanship. Using the artisanal workshops of his native Florence, Cavalli has been producing spectacular skins for decades, but he pulled out the stops for his 40th, with the whipstitching, lacing, and patchworking reaching new heights. Croc and python jackets were left unhemmed, the integrity of the skin preserved. Cavalli also rose to international fame on the back of his prints, which turned jet-set dolls into tawny-maned tigresses. Here, he steered clear of the big cats in favor of snake, rendered so accurately that it looked like the real thing in second-skin pants (less so in a floating gown on Karolina Kurkova). Layered over everything were sequins, beads, and crystals, painstakingly applied by hand in Cavalli's workshops.
The backdrop a jungle of huge flowers, fronds, and phallic pepperssuggested a hothouse island setting from a late-night B movie. When Cavalli's models stalked out at the finale, they could have been the cast of such a production. Who wouldn't be up for Ultravixens of Glamazonia? If the show struck just one chord and held it, it was still an appropriate testament to a singular vision that has weathered bouquets and brickbats for decades. When Cavalli took his bow, he was as usual with wife and right hand, Eva. And in that setting, surrounded by beauty, you could imagine he was in his own private Eden.
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