logo
John Galliano's Reimaging of Ancient Egypt for Dior's SS04 Collection

John Galliano's Reimaging of Ancient Egypt for Dior's SS04 Collection

CairoScene22-05-2025

John Galliano's Reimaging of Ancient Egypt for Dior's SS04 Collection
On a January Parisian day in 2004, the Seine was frozen, but inside the Dior tent, John Galliano was on fire - as per. What erupted on the runway wasn't so much a fashion show as a fever-dream: an opulent, maximalist séance with the ghosts of Ancient Egypt, reanimated through Galliano's unhinged yet hypnotic imagination.
Glitter and gold and a runway drenched in the shimmering illusion of pharaonic power, stretched through a distinctly early-millennium lens. It was decadent, disorienting, and gloriously impractical. This was not fashion for us mere mortals. This was Galliano in full spectacle mode: less designer, more high priest of pageantry.
For centuries, Egypt has been the west's mirror of excess and enigma, a sumptuous lens for their hedonism. Think Shakespeare's Cleopatra, reclining in poetic ruin; or Frank Ocean's millennial siren collapsing under the weight of her own mythology. Galliano understood this allure implicitly. When he took an aerial tour of Egypt and he gazed down, he envisioned a catwalk etched into the sand, a mirage where couture replaced civilisation, and a haute couture mirage rising from the dust and ashes of one of the greatest civilisations of human history.
The show opened with the surreal kind of theatricality that only Galliano could conjure. Traditional Egyptian music gave way to Beyoncé's Baby Boy, a sonic pivot that said everything: time is irrelevant, genre is a joke, and this is going to be fun. Like Frank Ocean's Pyramids eight years later, Galliano melted millennia into minutes. History wasn't just referenced. It was remixed.
Then came the collection. Like fashion's theatrical messiah, Galliano conjured a court of walking goddesses: towering models encased in metallic peplum jackets and sarcophagus-tight skirts, dizzyingly high heels and two-foot-tall hair sculptures, their hips jutted forward, and backs arched in homage to the Penn and Avedon portraits that informed this grand pharaonic hallucination. The Bangles' Walk Like an Egyptian thudded in the background, as if to wink and say, yes, we know exactly what we're doing.
Erin O'Connor opened the show swathed in a Nefertiti-inspired headdress and a ribbed, hourglass sheath in striped molten gold fabric, cinched and flared into an origami explosion of sculptural folds around the hips and arms. Every look that followed was another monument: scarab-encrusted corsets, lotus-embroidered gowns framed by leopard print fur stoles. One model looked like a walking pyramid, her skirt plumed in feathers. Another wore a ballooning mirror-panelled dress like a disco meet deity. It was gaudy and it was glorious.
And then, subtly, strangely, it shifted. What began as baroque grandeur started to unravel. Literally. The dresses softened, liquefied. Jewel tones gave way to sleek silvers, white chiffon peeled off like ceremonial wrappings. Models morphed from queens into wraiths, mummified and modern. Until, the dresses finally returned to the pageantry and pomp of a more familiar Dior, and Galliano emerged in a tailored pinstripe suit like a devious fashion archaeologist surveying his fantastical dig site.
Monumental jewellery dripped from their bodies, so oversized it bordered on surrealism. Turquoise, lapis, coral, and gold earrings the size of eagle eggs. Faces masked in carved wood, crafted by milliner Stephen Jones, evoked gods like Anubis, Bast and Horus. Those without masks wore another kind of facade: gold-dusted lips, redrawn brows, thick kohl liner, Pat McGrath's makeup mastery turning flesh into canvas.
But don't mistake this for a gimmick. Yes, it was wild. Yes, it was bedazzled beyond belief. But beneath the rhinestones was a real sense of reverence. Not historical accuracy - Galliano couldn't care less about that - but something more compelling: a cultural homage reimagined as couture hallucination.
One thing about Galliano: restraint has never been part of his design vocabulary. This is the man who once sent models down the runway waving dead mackerels at his graduate show. And at Dior Spring 2004, he was in peak form: unfiltered, unhinged, and utterly magnificent. Call it what you will (eclecticism, excess, ego with embroidery?) but thank the gods - and the hot air balloon ride over Egypt - that he never learned to play it safe.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hit Comedy ‘Siko Siko' to Stream Exclusively on Yango Play This Eid
Hit Comedy ‘Siko Siko' to Stream Exclusively on Yango Play This Eid

CairoScene

time30 minutes ago

  • CairoScene

Hit Comedy ‘Siko Siko' to Stream Exclusively on Yango Play This Eid

Still showing in cinemas, 'Siko Siko' has already pulled in over EGP 181 million and SAR 3.5 million in just eight weeks. Jun 04, 2025 Just in time for Eid Al-Adha, Yango Play is treating users to a festive surprise with the exclusive digital premiere of 'Siko Siko', the hit Egyptian comedy-action film. Still showing in cinemas, 'Siko Siko' has already pulled in over EGP 181 million and SAR 3.5 million in just eight weeks. Written by Mohamed El Dabbah and directed by Omar El Mohandes, the film stars rising stars Essam Omar and Taha Dessouky, along with Ali Sobhi, Tara Emad, Diana Hisham, Ahmed Abdel Hamid, and Mahmoud Sadeq Hadouta. It also features cameos by Bassem Samra and Khaled El Sawy. The story follows two young men: one works at a shipping company, while the other is a video game addict. Their lives are turned upside down when they find themselves caught in a whirlwind of danger, chaos, and high-stakes misadventures. With its blend of action and comedy, the film has struck a chord with audiences across the region. The exclusive release on Yango Play follows a successful Ramadan season for both Omar and Dessouky, who earned praise for their performances in the hit TV series 'Wlad El Shams' and 'Nos El Shaab Esmo Mohamed', respectively.

Travel Destinations Based On Your Favorite Film
Travel Destinations Based On Your Favorite Film

Identity

timean hour ago

  • Identity

Travel Destinations Based On Your Favorite Film

What if your next travel destination wasn't just a spot on a map, but a mood? A memory? A scene straight out of your favorite Egyptian movie? Cinema has a way of making us feel things deeply. Love, danger, wanderlust, grief, and sometimes, the best way to relive those emotions is to visit a place that carries the same energy. So if you're feeling stuck between booking a flight and rewatching your comfort movie (again), we've done all the work for you. Here's a travel guide with a cinematic feel. Hepta: The Last Lecture – Dahab – Sinai The film walks us through every stage of love; its joy, weight, and silence, and Dahab carries that same stillness. It's not loud or fast. It gives you space to feel things deeply, without interruption. Like Hepta, it's soft but honest. The kind of place where emotions surface slowly, and nothing needs to be said out loud to be understood. 7arameya Fi Thailand – Bangkok & Phuket, Thailand Let's be honest, no one watched 7arameya Fi Thailand for the plot. We watched it for the laughs, the chaos, and the sheer energy of a fish-out-of-water heist in a country bursting with sensory overload. Bangkok and Phuket still deliver that exact energy. From neon-lit markets to tropical beaches that feel straight out of a postcard, Thailand is where mischief meets magic. El Fil El Azra2 2 – Marrakesh, Morocco This movie isn't just a thriller, it's a slow unraveling of the mind. Morocco mirrors that perfectly. With its maze-like medinas, shadowy alleys, and rich, layered stillness, it feels like a place where nothing is ever just what it seems. Just like the film, Morocco holds beauty and darkness in the same breath. It's where you go to get lost and maybe find parts of yourself you weren't ready to meet. Hob El Banat – Barcelona, Spain Hob El Banat was about more than romance; it was about healing, sisterhood, and finding your way back to yourself. Barcelona captures that perfectly. It's warm without being overwhelming, stylish without trying too hard, and filled with art, music, and long, slow days that feel like personal growth in motion. Think rooftop conversations, golden-hour walks, and the kind of Mediterranean energy that reminds you that life can be soft and meaningful. Whether you're in the mood to feel deeply, dance freely, or just escape, let your favorite Egyptian film guide you. After all, your next destination might just be inspired by a scene you've watched a hundred times. Tell us which of these appeals to you the most.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store