The Versace mansion was purchased in 1992 and made a reported $33 million in improvements—including a pool flanked by a huge mosaic tile medallion with his trademark Medusa head in the center. Oh, yes & it was lined in 24 karat gold. Yeah. Let that sink in for a moment. Rumor has it the pool was designed in Italy, broken down in pieces, and mailed to the United States where a team of 75 people reassembled it
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Casa Casaurina may have been modeled on the home of an old
Italian family and decorated with nods to the past (there were Wedgwood
and Italian suites, fine antiques, classically-themed murals on the
walls and ceilings), but Gianni Versace eschewed that sense of history
in every part of his clothing designs—except his use of the iconic
Medusa head. “I am not interested in the past, except as a road to the
future,” he told the New York Times in 1990. “I want to be a designer
for my time. I love the music, the art, the movies of today. I want my
clothes to express all of this.”
Versace’s clothes were vibrant, loud, and often
in-your-face. His designs were not for the shy and reserved, but worked
best on the daring fashionista. His history started as many other
influential designers do—humbly. His mother (a dressmaker) taught him
to sew, and Gianni designed his first dress when he was just nine. His
father wanted him to pursue a career in architecture and
surveying—imagine if he had?
The fashion world would have been without
an important player—but the architecture world would have been turned
upside down. I’m sure he would have been amazing at it as well!
For all of his inspired designs, awards, and honors, Gianni
Versace was tragically shot and killed on the steps of Casa Casaurina
after returning from a morning walk by a stranger on a killing spree in
July of 1997.
His sister Donatella (who doubled as his muse) took over
as designer of the fashion house soon after, but Gianni’s death really
begs the question: what if? What if he was still alive, still
designing, and still breaking new ground?
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Casa Casaurina—where Versace once entertained the likes of
Princess Diana, Richard Avedon, and Madonna—was sold in 2013 for $41.5
million (it had hoped to sell for $125 million) and will soon re-open
as The Villa By Barton G. a luxury boutique hotel. Anyone else get the
urge to pack their favorite Versace silk jacket and body-con dress and
hop on a plane to Miami? Don’t forget the sunscreen!
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