Farewell to Mirella Petteni, revolutionary and aristocratic face of sixties fashion

He went away Mirella Petteni, one of the unmistakable faces of Italian fashion but not only, inimitable and unforgettable of the sixties. Musa and the greatest photographers of the time – Gian Paolo Barbieri, Helmut Newton and Irving Penn, among the many – the famous mannequin Bergamo He passed away on Wednesday 27 August.

Mirella Petteni, Musa Ribelle
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Androgynous physique, face from the classic lines and from theallure Aristocratic – which led Newton to nickname it none other than “countess” – he came to put on the cover of Vogue America under the direction of Diana Vreeland before leaving the space in front of the camera to become editor of Vogue Italy.

Mirella Petteni

Mirella Petteni portrayed by Helmut Newton with a dress by Mademoiselle Ricci and a Tiara by Miriam Haskell.

Helmut Newton

Born “in a very simple family of Bergamo”, as he used to say his origins distant from the elitist club to which fashion was addressed in the first half of the twentieth century, he lived between Milan, Rome and New York, was a consultant for Valentino and Versace and collaborated with Calvin Klein and Ralph Lauren, who have always remembered her Love for culturefor the content rather than for the image in itself.

Mirella Petteni

Mirella Petteni in Gibo in a shot for Vogue.

Henry Clarke

Mirella Petteni

Model Mirella in a shot for Vogue.

Gianni Penati

Refined interpreter of the fashion of the time, with its plastic and sophisticated poses, Petteni was A woman and revolutionary beauty: different from the most widespread female ideal in its times, strong -willy and of character, altered but at the same time sensual. In a word, unique.

Source: Vanity Fair

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