Fashion’s original social media master Scott Schuman, aka The Sartorialist, hits the streets of one of Europe’s most stylish cities for this tailor-made collection of Milano’s visually charismatic people. Schuman, who now calls Milano his home, combines portraiture with dazzling cityscapes and revealing reportage.
Back in 2005, Scott Schuman transformed fashion photography forever when he founded the blog The Sartorialist. The idea was simple: to open a dialogue between fashion and daily life, by shooting locals in public spaces. But in the lineage of Bill Cunningham and August Sander, that unpretentious, radical emphasis on "real people"—off the runway, out of the studio—elevated people-watching to an art and street style to high fashion, long before Instagram. In Milano, Schuman found a muse dressed for the task.
Milano chronicles nearly twenty years of his devotion to the inimitable Milanese and their bustling, stylish city, first as a visitor, then as a local. Featuring a foreword by the late Giorgio Armani
and an extensive interview unpacking Schuman's unique approach to
capturing fashion in the wild, the photos are so cinematically composed,
it's a wonder they were shot on the move. Schuman seems to pause
Milano, not only those shoppers, skaters, and smokers who might have the
time but those without it: Miuccia Prada, Emiliano Salci, Luciano Barbera, the Sozzani sisters, all caught here in the same streets and caffés. What emerges is a street-view history of modern Milanese fashion,
by an American with the open mind to see the elegance overlooked by
locals born to it and missed in stiffer fashion shoots—the beauty in the
authentic, unpredictable styles combined only by those under no
pressure to conform.
Young and old, they pose while Milano flies by on bikes,
Vespas, and trams, amid a dazzle of marble, frescos, sculptures,
spires, columns, ornate palazzi and brutalist facades, local markets,
florists, vertical gardens, iconic hangouts like Bar Basso and Marchesi
1824, espressos, handbags, high heels, and suits in every color
imaginable. From the canals of Naviglio Grande to the cobblestones of
Via Brera to the glass ceiling of “the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II”
and Milano Centrale, the city’s blend of architectural styles is seen as
a radiant reflection of its people.
“Milano does not lend
itself to superficial, fleeting acquaintances,” Armani notes in his
foreword; part travelogue, part style bible, here is an exclusive chance to tune into the city’s rhythms, energy, and soul as
intimately as Schuman has, to discover what makes it one-of-a-kind. For
admirers of fashion, photography, and la dolce vita, this is the authentic street-style of the fashion capital of the world
that won’t be found on Instagram, captured by the pioneer who made it
cool and meaningful. In Schuman’s words, these aren’t just clothes,
they’re clothes that tell you “who the people are”.
Scott Schuman: The Sartorialist Milano
Edition: English
Hardcover, 24 x 32.7 cm, 1.64 kg,
Pages: 248

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