André Leon Talley dreamed of a life ‘in the pages of Vogue'
Every time we see a “fashion moment”, we use the words of André Leon Talley, from his description of Galliano’s 1994 Japonisme show.
Distinguished Professor Peter McNeil, School of Design.
Talley, who died yesterday age 73, was a flamboyant, over-the-top figure from the fashion industry, inclined to snobbery and rather overbearing. He had a longstanding love of French culture and the cross-fertilisation of fashion, art, poetry and life.
Most prominently, he worked at Condé Nast for four decades, where, as creative director and editor-at-large of Vogue, he shaped the way we understand and talk about fashion.
Read the full story in The Conversation: André Leon Talley dreamed of a life ‘in the pages of Vogue, where bad things never happened’