The Best of Francesco Risso’s “Poetic Anarchy” for Marni in Vogue

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“For Risso, the curious twists of the mind are our bulwark against anything proscribed or preordained; our brains and our passions will, in his view, set us free,” wrote Sally Singer. “It’s empowering and wild, which, one could argue, is the whole point of fashion.” Oumie Jammeh and Adut Akech in Marni dresses that harmonize color and pattern.

Photographed by Patrick Demarchelier, Vogue, December 2017

This morning it was announced that Marni creative director Francesco Risso would exit the brand after almost 10 years at the helm. “For Francesco Risso, the curious twists of the mind are our bulwark against anything proscribed or preordained; our brains and our passions will, in his view, set us free,” wrote Sally Singer in her review of his Fall 2019 collection for the house. “It’s empowering and wild, which, one could argue, is the whole point of fashion.”

It didn’t take long for Risso to start world-building at Marni. The designer, who joined the Italian house from Prada in 2016, replaced the label’s distinctive haute bohemian style for something altogether artier, more spontaneous, and sometimes messier with designs like half-and-half “Frankenstein” dresses and cut-out paper frocks. One of the ways Risso elevated craft was by revealing the construction of clothes; he created joy through color, and fostered a sense of togetherness, by adding playground elements to his shows—most memorable for spring 2022, when the audience was dressed in upcycled garments labeled Marniphernalia: Miscellaneous Handpainted Treasures.

Risso brought a bit of poetry to all he touched. Spring 2018’s theme was “two English gardens as seen by Tim Burton . . . with candies”; it was followed by his Technoprimitivism collection for fall, a consideration of  “the contrast between our irresistible love of innovation and technology, and the other side, the movements of the soul that you cannot bring to a technological meaning.” Sally Singer praised the designer’s “sumptuous, deliciously playful, and utterly perverse impulses,” while Mark Holgate focused on the designer’s “poetically anarchic way”—qualities that are discernible in the collection, below, of Risso’s best work in Vogue.

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Stripe It Rich: Caroline Trentini in a Marni, top, skirt, and bag.

Photographed by Patrick Demarchelier, Vogue, October 2017
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Flower Power: Margaret Qualley wears a Marni dress.

Photographed by Mikael Jansson, Vogue, March 2018
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Flower Power: Haley Bennett in a Marni top, skirt, and shoes.

Photographed by Mikael Jansson, Vogue, March 2018
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Vittoria Ceretti in Marni’s “city-slick trench.”

Photographed by Angelo Pennetta, Vogue, March 2018
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Caroline Trentini in a plaid-faced Marni coat.

Photographed by Patrick Demarchelier, Vogue, March 2018
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Lara Stone in a hand-painted and sequinned Marni dress with actor Jorge Antonio Guerrero.

Photographed by Colin Dodgson, Vogue, December 2018
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Vittoria Ceretti in a Marni dress from a the spring 2019 collection that felt, Risso said, “like Dr. Frankenstein bringing the Venus de Milo back to life—a remote future of disheveled nymphs, 3-D Amazons!”

Photographed by Angelo Pennetta, Vogue, March 2019
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Fran Summers wears a cherry-red Marni dress.

Photographed by Angelo Pennetta, Vogue, June 2019
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Sora Choi wears a colorful Marni sweater.

Photographed by Ethan James Green, Vogue, February 2020
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Kendall Jenner wears a wing-shaped, floral printed Marni top.

Photographed by Jackie Nickerson, Vogue, March 2020
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Kai Avent-deLeon in a Marni dress from a collection that Risso explained, was “collaged from the beginning to the end—from macro to micro to fractal. It’s about putting together remnants.”

Photographed by Ethan James Green, Vogue, September 2020
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Kanako Takase, left, with Shingo Shibata, in a Marni coat.

Photographed by Ethan James Green, Vogue, September 2020
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Mayowa Nicholas in a street-ready Marni collection.

Photographed by Philip-Daniel Ducasse, Vogue, January 2021
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Sara Esparza, left, in a Marni coat with Marsella Rea in a Marni dress. “I’m more inclined toward thinking of this as a work that’s been more collective than ever,” said Risso of his spring 2021 collection. “It’s devoted to freedom, self-expression, to celebrating the hand that painted all those objects that create the canvas of Marni.”

Photographed by Dorian Ulises Lopez Macias, Vogue, March 2021
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Brianna Capozzi wears a Renaissance-looking Marni dress.

Photographed by Brianna Lee Capozzi, Vogue, June 2021
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Country Living: Sam Austins, left, in a Marni top, T-shirt, and pants, with Kaytranada.

Photographed by Ryan McGinley, Vogue, June/July 2021
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No Mountain High Enough: Abby Champion with Adut Akech in a Marni sweater and skirt.

Photographed by Ryan McGinley, Vogue, June/July 2021
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Fit to Print: Amelia Gray in Marni.

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“Stripes are strongly associated with direction,” Risso said in 2021, and he certainly had a destination in mind with his collections.

Photographed by Nacho Allegre, Vogue, June 2017