Degas’s Ballerinas Jeté From the Canvas to the Runway Inline
Photo: Marcio Madeira1/6Three looks in John Galliano’s Fall 2005 Haute Couture collection for Dior were created in homage to Degas’s dancers. Here, a model wears a golden confection with embroidery inspired by Peruvian costume.
Photo: Daniele Oberrauch2/6Riccardo Tisci deemed the women in his Spring 2008 Couture collection for Givenchy “gothic ballerinas,” an idea best exemplified in this look, which echoes the collarbone-exposing shapes and prominent waist ribbons of Degas’s dancers.
Photo: Monica Feudi / Feudiguaineri.com3/6Sarah Burton’s Fall 2012 collection for Alexander McQueen had a decidedly future-meets-past spirit, and though not explicitly referencing Degas, the shape and color of this dress seems drawn from one of his onstage works.
Photo: Style.com4/6For his Spring 2003 Couture collection, Jean Paul Gaultier turned a Degas painting into a print, which he used to frame the tulle skirt of a gown.
Photo: Yannis Vlamos / Indigitalimages.com5/6Dancers have served as a prime inspiration for Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli at Valentino. For their Spring 2014 Couture collection, the duo echoed the volume of Degas’s dancers in this nude froufrou frock.