The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (FCG), located next to Praça de Espanha in Lisbon, has announced that the exhibition entitled ‘Art and Fashion in the Gulbenkian Collection’ will open on April 18, presenting iconic and enigmatic works by Portuguese and international figures. Running until June 22 in the Main Gallery and closed only on Tuesdays, the exhibition “invites us to enter a space where art breathes fashion and fashion awakens art,” said the eponymous foundation, named after the Ottoman Armenian petroleum engineer and businessman who was born in Istanbul, Turkey, became a naturalised British citizen, and later settled in the Portuguese capital.
Gulbenkian.pt
Curated by Eloy Martínez de la Peña, the exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue illustrated with photographs by Jon Cazenave, shot exclusively for this project, which forms part of the FCG’s 70th anniversary celebrations.
“What links Vivienne Westwood to the French 18th century? Guo Pei to an Ancient Egyptian funerary mask? Balenciaga to an Assyrian bas-relief? Or Alexander McQueen and the House of Givenchy to Japanese prints?” read the foundation’s website.
“In a sensory experience, works from the Gulbenkian Collection are set in dialogue with leading figures in haute couture and contemporary design, revealing forms, symbols and gestures that transcend time,” it explained.
“Starting from Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian’s (1869–1955) deep interest in art and fashion, the exhibition begins by showing how the Gulbenkian couple followed the trends of their time,” it continued.
“The richness and diversity of the Gulbenkian Collection — with works of art from Ancient Egypt to the 20th century — allow us to explore how recurring motifs in the history of art are taken up and reinterpreted by contemporary fashion, in national and international contexts.”
This is a journey through around 100 works from the Gulbenkian Museum, shown side by side with 140 garments by names such as Alexander McQueen, Balenciaga, Dior, Jean Paul Gaultier, Versace, Vivienne Westwood and Yves Saint Laurent, to name a few, not forgetting Portuguese designers such as Alves/Gonçalves, José António Tenente, Maria Gambina, Nuno Baltazar and Nuno Gama.
“Paintings, sculptures, jewellery and other objects enter into dialogue with fashion pieces that reinvent, narrate, decipher or complete them,” the exhibit website also stated. “These are unexpected encounters that show how the aesthetics, ideas and sensibilities that inhabit this Collection can illuminate the world of fashion.”
In short, it is an invitation to “understand how beauty travels through time”, via diaphanous couture gowns that reveal to the attentive eye what “texts do not always say: hierarchies, aspirations, social rituals, silences and revelations.”
“From classical painting to contemporary design, clothing becomes a mirror that shows that art and fashion have always shared the desire to narrate the human condition,” it concluded.
Nike Inc. sold its digital products subsidiary, RTFKT, pronounced “artifact,” marking the world’s largest athletic-wear company’s retreat from blockchain collectibles roughly one year after shuttering the business.
Nike
The sale comes as the Nike retreats from its engagement with digital collectibles and blockchain-based products, which peaked with its acquisition of the company. Nike declined to release terms of the transaction or identify the buyer.
“RTFKT transitioned to a new owner on December 17, launching a new chapter for the company and its community,” a spokesperson for Beaverton, Oregon-based Nike said in a statement on Wednesday. “Nike continues to invest in delivering innovative products and experiences across physical, digital and virtual environments.”
Nike had agreed to purchase the virtual collectibles company during the height of the NFT craze for an undisclosed sum in 2021. At the time, Nike said it was part of a plan “to invest in the RTFKT brand, serve and grow their innovative and creative community and extend Nike’s digital footprint and capabilities.”
In December 2024, Nike announced that it would close RTFKT shortly after new Chief Executive Officer Elliott Hill expressed his goal to refocus the company on its core sports business and its partnerships with wholesale companies.
The founder of sneaker reseller Zadeh Kicks was sentenced to almost six years in prison for a fraud conspiracy that led to the infamous collapse of the online platform and $80 million in losses for customers and financial institutions.
Bloomberg
Michael Malekzadeh, 42, was sentenced Tuesday in Eugene, Oregon, to 70 months behind bars and ordered to forfeit more than $15 million in assets, federal prosecutors said in a statement. Last year, Malekzadeh pleaded guilty to wire fraud and bank fraud.
The sentencing signaled the end of a case that sent shockwaves through the sneaker reselling market, which reached record highs during the 2020 pandemic. Malekzadeh rode this boom to improbable heights, offering sought-after shoes at competitive prices from his warehouse in Oregon, even before manufacturers released them.
A lawyer for Malekzadeh didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
According to the US Attorney’s Office in Oregon, Malekzadeh “advertised, sold, and collected payments from customers for preorders knowing he could not satisfy all orders placed.” All in all, he owed customers more than $65 million in unfulfilled orders and defrauded financial institutions out of $15 million they’d loaned him, court records show.
Malekzadeh used the money to fund a lavish lifestyle, prosecutors said. Agents seized luxury watches, jewelry and hundreds of handbags during the investigation, court documents show.
As part of their plea agreements, Malekzadeh and his partner, Bethany Mockerman, the company’s chief financial officer, agreed to pay restitution in full to their victims. The judge set a restitution hearing for March 31.
The government said it raised $7.5 million from selling Malekzadeh’s residence in Eugene, his watches and luxury cars manufactured by Bentley, Ferrari, Lamborghini and Porsche.
In a separate case, Zadeh Kicks, which Malekzadeh founded in 2013, and all of its sneakers were taken over by a court-appointed receiver, who’s been in charge of liquidating its assets.
The case is US v. Malekzadeh, 22-cr-262, US District Court, District of Oregon (Eugene).
Spanish fashion house Adolfo Domínguez continues to see changes at the top. The business has begun 2026 without a managing director following the departure of Íñigo de Llano, just five months after he joined, after his strategic approach failed to align with that of the board of directors, as reported by La Voz de Galicia.
Interior of one of the Ourense-based brand’s new stores in Beirut – Adolfo Domínguez
The executive was appointed last May to take charge of the company, replacing Antonio Puente, whose removal as CEO was agreed by the board of directors at the same time. Coming from the Inditex group, De Llano brought more than two decades of experience in the textile industry, holding senior responsibilities across markets such as the US, Australia, the UK, and Ireland.
However, five months after his arrival, the relationship between the parties ended. According to company sources, shareholders concluded that the strategy put forward by the executive did not have the board’s backing, leading to the decision not to continue the working relationship.
At present, the managing director position remains vacant, while the company’s top executive duties have, since the removal of Antonio Puente as CEO, continued to rest with Adriana Domínguez, president of the company since 2020 and the founder’s daughter.
Founded in the 1970s by the eponymous designer, Adolfo Domínguez posted revenues of 65 million euros in the first half of the 2025 financial year, driven in particular by growth in its international sales. At the close of its latest financial year, the Ourense-based company had a network of 371 points of sale in 51 countries and a presence in 31 markets through its e-commerce platform.
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