Donatella Versace’s Best Moments in Vogue

What would Donatella Versace be doing if she wasn’t leading one of fashion’s most popular houses? “Having a nervous breakdown, probably.” This is to say that fashion is truly Versace’s lifeblood. When her brother, Gianni, started the Versace brand in 1978, Donatella was his muse; the perfume, Blonde, was made in her honor in 1995. After Gianni’s untimely death in 1997, Donatella became the brand’s chief creative force. Since then, the Versace woman has been cut, carved, and crafted precisely in her likeness.
Donatella is blonde, so for Spring 2004’s Atelier Versace show, the models wore waist-length blonde wigs. Donatella loves heels, so for Spring 2014, platforms and block heels were exaggerated to nearly eight inches. Donatella often wears black, so when Stephanie Seymour returned to the Versace runway after a near-30-year absence, she did it in a cutaway black number.
If this seems like an exclusionary vision, it’s a testament to Donatella’s modernity that Versace has become the de facto wardrobe for women at the top of their game. The proof: Both Michelle Obama and Kim Kardashian West have worn dresses made from Donatella’s golden chain mail. Serena Williams is a longtime fan, choosing a sun yellow gown for her duties as this year’s Met Gala cohost. Ditto Jennifer Lopez, whose love affair with La Vida Versace began when she sported one of Donatella’s barely there dresses to the Grammys in 2000. The list of Donatella acolytes goes on and on, a veritable A-team of women who have carved their own paths: Madonna, Beyoncé, Lady Gaga, Naomi Campbell—but it’s not only women. In 1995, Prince recorded an exclusive album for Versace, which will be reissued this year.
Perhaps it will serve as walk-out music for Donatella Versace when she takes the stage at Vogue’s third annual Forces of Fashion conference this October? Until then, take a look back at Donatella’s best looks as captured by Vogue.
Donatella Versace is a speaker at Vogue’s 2019 Forces of Fashion conference, October 10 and 11 in New York City; learn more and buy tickets here.