Versace’s
Shocking Announcement
After one hit collection, the designer
Dario Vitale will be leaving the brand. What’s going on?
That’s all he got? Eight months?
Key Event
·
Dario Vitale,
Versace’s creative director, is leaving after only eight months and one collection.
·
His departure coincides with Prada Group’s
$1.4 billion acquisition of Versace from Capri Holdings.
Background
·
Vitale was hired by Capri Holdings, not
Prada.
·
Previously, he spent 15 years at Miu
Miu under Miuccia Prada, helping shape its success with younger audiences.
·
His debut Versace collection was widely
praised, resonating with critics, celebrities, and Gen Z.
Reception of His Work
·
Celebrities like Olivia Dean, Addison
Rae, Lorde, and Aimee Lou Wood embraced his designs.
·
Critics described his show as a “seismic
shift” for the brand, bringing fresh energy compared to Donatella Versace’s
more traditional approach.
·
His style drew from Gianni Versace’s
South Beach years, with bold, hedonistic aesthetics.
Industry Reaction
·
Many analysts and fashion commentators
expressed shock and disappointment:
o Nicky
Campbell: “It felt progressive and desperately needed.”
o Luca
Solca: “It’s a pity… I don’t understand why this happens.”
o Robert
Burke: “Now even the educated fashion consumer is confused.”
·
Concerns raised about job insecurity
for designers and retail hesitation due to lack of continuity.
Implications
·
The abrupt exit highlights tensions between
creative vision and corporate strategy.
·
Prada’s statement was polite but distant,
signaling Vitale was not their choice.
·
Emmanuel Gintzburger, Versace’s CEO, will
lead the creative team until a new director is named.
Takeaway
Vitale’s short-lived tenure is seen as
a missed opportunity. Despite strong critical and cultural impact, his departure
underscores the instability of fashion leadership and raises questions about how
heritage brands balance tradition, innovation, and corporate control.
[ABS
News Service/08.12.2025]
On Thursday, Prada Group announced that
Dario Vitale, the previously unknown designer who had dared to take the reins of
Versace after Donatella, was leaving the fashion house after a single collection.
The news detonated across the fashion-celebrity nexus, leaving behind a trail of
shredded denim, chain mail and confusion.
His tenure was one of the shortest of the
creative director era — and certainly the only one to be cut short after a debut
that was one of the most buzzed about, debated and potentially influential of the
recent runway season. Not only had it knocked the socks off jaded fashion critics
like this one, but it resonated through social media and with that holy grail of
heritage brands: Gen Z.
Indeed, less than three weeks before the
announcement of Mr. Vitale’s departure, Olivia Dean, the 26-year-old British singer-songwriter
nominated for a Grammy Award as best new artist, had worn four — four! — looks from
his new collection as the musical guest on “Saturday Night Live.”
“It’s crazy,” Nicky Campbell, a fashion
commentator who posts under the Instagram account Nickycbell and is known for his
pithy and unvarnished red carpet recaps, said when he heard Mr. Vitale was leaving.
“This was the first time I really understood the brand. It felt progressive and
desperately needed.”
Hanan Besovic, who uses the Instagram account
ideservecouture, posted, “I’m not happy, because I wanted to see more.”
Even Luca Solca, a luxury analyst at Bernstein
who represents a very different perspective, was surprised. “It’s a pity,” he said,
adding: Mr. Vitale’s “first step was good. I don’t understand why this happens.”
That the news of Mr. Vitale’s departure
came only two days after Prada Group announced the completion of its nearly $1.4 billion acquisition
of Versace from Capri Holdings was clearly not a coincidence. Mr.
Vitale, after all, was hired by Capri management after Donatella Versace had decided
to cede her design duties and become Versace’s chief
brand ambassador. He was not Prada’s choice.
“We would like to sincerely thank Dario
for his outstanding contribution to the development of the brand’s creative strategy
during this transition period, and we wish him all the very best in his future endeavors,”
went the Prada statement. It had no attribution, though Lorenzo Bertelli, Prada’s
director of marketing and sustainability and the son of Miuccia Prada and Patrizio
Bertelli, is now also the executive chairman of Versace.
Still, given that before joining Versace,
Mr. Vitale had spent 15 years working under Mrs. Prada at Miu Miu, most recently
as its design director, and given that during that time he had been critical to
transforming it into the explosive success story of the Instagram generation, it
seemed a particularly anodyne goodbye. Some had seen his presence at Versace as
a potential attraction for Prada — he was a known talent, at least to them — but
that was clearly not the case.
“He left the Prada Group, and then suddenly,
he was part of the Prada Group again,” said Marigay McKee, a founder of the venture
capital firm Fernbrook Capital and a former president of Saks Fifth Avenue. “That
could be an awkward situation.”
Even before Mr. Vitale’s first collection
was rolled out, there were rumors that he was not long for the job. First, it was
said that Mr. Vitale would not have an official show, and Versace was not listed
on the Milan Fashion Week calendar. Then Mr. Vitale had a surprise show, but neither
Mrs. Prada nor Ms. Versace attended. The press team said that they didn’t want to
“steal the limelight” from Mr. Vitale, but the conscious distancing was glaring
— and it seemed like a backhanded message.
Then came the rapturous response to the
show and its celebrity supporters. Aside from Ms. Dean, they include Addison Rae,
who is also nominated for a Grammy as best new artist, Lorde and Aimee Lou Wood,
the gaptoothed actress from “Sex Education” and “The White Lotus,” who appeared
in Mr. Vitale’s first Versace eyewear campaign. Rumor had it that Mr. Vitale may
have bought himself some more time. Even if Mr. Vitale’s clothes had not yet made
it into stores and their literal impact was impossible to measure, their stylistic
impact was another story.
“The show went very wide on social, because
people were having such a strong reaction to it,” Mr. Campbell said. “It was like
a seismic shift. You couldn’t avoid it.”
What Mr. Vitale did in his very short time
at Versace was offer a new way to see the brand, which under Ms. Versace had seemed
increasingly frozen in amber, locked into a rinse-and-repeat cycle of old goddess
gown references and medusa head prints. You can understand it: She had taken over
as creative director, a job she unexpectedly assumed after the murder of her brother
Gianni, and had dedicated herself to keeping the company, and his vision, alive.
It was a task she managed in the face of great pain and skepticism with resounding
success, as the sale price indicated.
But the house needed someone else to take
it forward. The fact that Ms. Versace accepted a recent Council of Fashion Designers
of America award for positive change, with Amber Valletta wearing yet another version
of the famous green palm-print gown that Jennifer Lopez wore in 2000, illustrates
the point.
By contrast, Mr. Vitale, 42, took inspiration
from Gianni Versace’s years in South Beach, Fla., and brought an accessibly hedonistic
edge to his work, with crotch-hugging pants, studded leathers, a “Miami Vice” color
palette and beaded skirts that flashed a bit of bottom as they swished past. Though
the show shocked some of the old Versace customers, Mr. Vitale seemed a part of
a new generation of designers that emerged last season, including Jonathan Anderson at
Dior, Matthieu Blazy at Chanel
and Michael Rider at Celine,
who were less beholden to the past of the storied brands they had inherited and
more focused on reshaping them for the future.
“It brought a new set of eyeballs to Versace,”
said Robert Burke, the founder of a luxury consultancy. Abruptly abandoning Mr.
Vitale’s vision, he said, means that “now even the educated fashion consumer is
confused.”
The optics of dumping a designer so quickly,
before it is possible to assess his success at retail, sends a particularly disheartening
and jumbled message to designers and to consumers. There’s a reason Mr. Anderson
said he had told Dior he needed at least “five collections” before his ideas would
be fully realized. History is littered with the stories of wildly successful designers
who took a few years to get it right, including Pierpaolo Piccioli and Maria Grazia
Chiuri at Valentino.
“Many designers already feel a lack of
job security,” said Karen Harvey, a longtime fashion headhunter, referring to the
more than 20 designers who were
fired and hired over the last year. “This will not help.”
For retailers, she said, “this will impact sales, as the continuity of vision will
likely not be there for future collections, so they will certainly have pause” before
investing in the brand.
According to the Prada announcement, a
new creative director will be named “in due course.” In the meantime, the creative
team will be led by Emmanuel Gintzburger, the chief executive officer.
“It’s such a missed opportunity,” Mr. Campbell
said. Whether it also becomes one of fashion’s cautionary tales is the question.