By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
BeautyNews.com - Skincare | Makeup | Fashion | News Stories Updated DailyBeautyNews.com - Skincare | Makeup | Fashion | News Stories Updated Daily
Notification Show More
Aa
  • Home
  • Beauty
  • Skincare
  • Makeup
  • Nails
  • Health & Wellness
  • Fashion
  • Travel
  • Blog
Reading: Oliviero Toscani, Driving Force Behind Provocative Benetton Ads, Dies at 82
Share
BeautyNews.com - Skincare | Makeup | Fashion | News Stories Updated DailyBeautyNews.com - Skincare | Makeup | Fashion | News Stories Updated Daily
Aa
Search
  • Home
  • Beauty
  • Skincare
  • Makeup
  • Nails
  • Health & Wellness
  • Fashion
  • Travel
  • Blog
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2023 - All Rights Reserved.
Oliviero Toscani, Driving Force Behind Provocative Benetton Ads, Dies at 82
BeautyNews.com - Skincare | Makeup | Fashion | News Stories Updated Daily > Fashion > Oliviero Toscani, Driving Force Behind Provocative Benetton Ads, Dies at 82
Fashion

Oliviero Toscani, Driving Force Behind Provocative Benetton Ads, Dies at 82

Last updated: 2025/01/13 at 8:33 PM
Published January 13, 2025
Share
6 Min Read
SHARE

Oliviero Toscani, an Italian photographer who, as the creative brain behind Benetton’s advertising campaigns, used images of an AIDS patient and death row prisoners to break the boundaries of fashion images, died on Monday. He was 82.

His death was announced by his family on Instagram. They did not say where he died or give a cause of death, but in August Mr. Toscani told the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera where he had been diagnosed amyloidosisa rare and incurable condition involving an accumulation of proteins.

Are shock-and-awe campaigns In the 1980s and 1990s, Benetton grew from a small Italian brand into a global fashion giant, with provocative ads that blurred the lines between marketing and activism, high art and consumer industry.

In one ad, an AIDS patient lay on his back, his mouth open, his hands curled on his chest. His dark eyes stared past his family gathered around his deathbed. The patient, David Kirby, looked almost Christ-like.

And there, bottom right, a few words hung in a green box: “United Colors of Benetton.”

The ad, which appeared in the 1990s, was one of the most provocative and divisive in recent fashion history, sparking fierce debate over whether Benetton and Mr. Toscani were creating art, engaging in advocacy or exploiting the epidemic to to sell clothes.

In particular, Mr Toscani had the Permission from the Kirby family to use a colorized version of the image, which was taken in 1990 by photographer Therese Frare. The Kirbys said the campaign had helped raise awareness of AIDS.

See also  Nike Is Dropping Jason Voorhees Air Force 1 Halloween Sneakers

“Benetton did not use or exploit us,” the Kirby family said, claiming this was a way to get their son’s portrait “seen around the world, which is exactly what David wanted.”

Mr. Toscani’s ads were often socially progressive, featuring images of racially diverse and gay families. They were also intended to shock. He used photos of horses mating. He used the bloodstained one uniform of a soldier killed in Bosnia and Herzegovina. One ad showed actors dressed as a priest and a nun kissing.

“Ad agencies make millions by repeating the same old thing,” he told The New York Times in 1995, adding, “We’re trying to go in a different direction.”

Mr Toscani sometimes even crossed the line for Benetton. He joined the company in 1982 and left in 2000 amid an uproar over an ad campaign featuring photos of death row inmates in the United States.

In 2017 he returned as creative director. But his career at Benetton came to an end in 2020, not because of the calculated and daring risks he had taken in photography and advertising, where he relished his broad challenges to conventional ideas of respectability. Rather, it was due to a casual comment he made in a radio interview about the collapse of a bridge in Italy, which killed more than forty people. “Who cares if a bridge collapses?” he had said. Although he apologized, Benetton fired him.

Italian politicians And creatively leaders honored him Monday with tributes on social media. The designer Valentino Garavani, the creator of Valentino, called him “a visionary who challenged the world through his lens.” The designer Giorgio Armani wrote that “the immediacy and visual impact of his language set a standard.”

See also  The Best Dressed Men Mastered The Art Of Elevated Casualwear

Oliviero Toscani was born in Milan on February 28, 1942. He followed in the footsteps of his father, Fedele Toscani, a photojournalist. Mr Toscani trained at the Zurich School of Applied Arts and worked as a fashion designer before joining the Benetton Group as art director in 1982.

His survivors include his wife, Kirsti Moseng Toscani, and their three children, Rocco, Lola and Ali. Mr. Toscani had been married twice before and had three more children. Complete information about survivors was not immediately available.

In his final months, Mr Toscani told Corriere della Sera that he had lost weight during treatment for amyloidosis and that his sense of taste had diminished. Wine tasted different to him, he said. “I’m not interested in living like this,” he added.

But in September, he traveled to the Museum für Gestaltung Zurich for a big retrospective from his work called “Oliviero Toscani: Photography and Provocation.” It closed just over a week before he died.

“I have discovered that advertising is the richest and most powerful medium that exists today,” he told The Times in 1991. “So I feel responsible to do more than just say, ‘Our jersey is nice.’”

Elisabetta Povoledo And Matthew Mpoke Bigg reporting contributed.

You Might Also Like

Dwyane Wade on Breaking Fashion Barriers

Last Week’s Best Celebrities’ Gala Outfits That Stole The Spotlight

Can I Wear a Sheath Dress Without Looking Like a MAGA Woman?

The Best Hats at the 2025 Kentucky Derby

Jordan Casteel Honors Her Grandmother at the Met Gala

TAGGED: Ads, Benetton, Dies, driving, Force, Oliviero, Provocative, Toscani

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
I have read and agree to the terms & conditions
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
Previous Article Best Celebrity Outfits From Last Week’s Events Lineup Best Celebrity Outfits From Last Week’s Events Lineup
Next Article 10 simple tips to tame eczema on your hands, even in winter! 10 simple tips to tame eczema on your hands, even in winter!

BeautyNews

Your go-to destination for all things beauty. Discover the latest trends, skincare tips, makeup tutorials, product reviews, and self-care inspiration.

Subscribe Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

I have read and agree to the terms & conditions

Find Us on Socials

  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Email: Beauty7685@gmail.com
© 2023 Beautynews.com. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?