Oliviero Toscani, an Italian photographer who used pictures of an AIDS affected person and demise row inmates to interrupt the boundaries of trend imagery because the artistic mastermind of Benetton’s promoting campaigns, died on Monday. He was 82.
His demise was introduced by his household on Instagram. They didn’t say the place he died or cite a reason behind demise, however in August Mr. Toscani advised the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera that he had been recognized with amyloidosis, a uncommon and incurable situation in which there’s a buildup of protein.
His shock-and-awe campaigns within the Nineteen Eighties and ’90s helped flip Benetton from a small Italian model into a world trend powerhouse, with provocative commercials that blurred the traces between advertising and activism, excessive artwork and shopper business.
In a single advert, an AIDS affected person lay on his again, his mouth open, his palms curled on his chest. His darkish eyes stared previous his household, who had gathered round his deathbed. The affected person, David Kirby, seemed virtually Christ-like.
And there, close to the underside proper, a couple of phrases hung in a inexperienced field: “United Colours of Benetton.”
The commercial, which ran within the Nineteen Nineties, was one of the provocative and divisive in current trend historical past, prompting livid debates over whether or not Benetton, and Mr. Toscani, had been creating artwork, partaking in advocacy or exploiting the epidemic to promote its garments.
Notably, Mr. Toscani had the Kirby household’s permission to make use of a colorized model of the picture, which was shot in 1990 by the photographer Therese Frare. The Kirbys mentioned the marketing campaign had helped broaden consciousness about AIDS.
“Benetton didn’t use us, or exploit us,” the Kirby household mentioned, sustaining that this was a method for his or her son’s portrait to be “seen all around the world, and that’s precisely what David needed.”
Mr. Toscani’s advertisements had been usually socially progressive, with pictures of racially numerous and homosexual households. They had been additionally meant to shock. He used photos of horses copulating. He used the bloodstained uniform of a soldier killed in Bosnia-Herzegovina. One advert featured actors dressed as a priest and a nun kissing.
“Promoting companies make thousands and thousands by repeating the identical previous factor,” he advised The New York Instances in 1995, including, “We attempt to go one other method.”
Mr. Toscani generally crossed the road even for Benetton. He joined the corporate in 1982 and left in 2000 amid an uproar over an advert marketing campaign that featured pictures of demise row inmates throughout america.
He returned as artistic director in 2017. However his profession at Benetton got here to an finish in 2020, not due to the calculated and daring dangers he had taken in pictures and promoting, by which he delighted in his broadside challenges to standard concepts of respectability. Quite, it was due to an offhand remark he made in a radio interview a couple of bridge collapse in Italy by which greater than 40 folks died. “Who cares {that a} bridge collapsed?” he had mentioned. Although he apologized, Benetton fired him.
Italian politicians and artistic leaders honored him in social media tributes on Monday. The designer Valentino Garavani, the creator of Valentino, referred to as him “a visionary who challenged the world by his lens.” The designer Giorgio Armani wrote that “the directness and visible impression of his language set a regular.”
Oliviero Toscani was born in Milan on Feb. 28, 1942. He adopted within the footsteps of his father, Fedele Toscani, a photojournalist. Mr. Toscani skilled on the Zurich College of Utilized Arts and labored as a designer earlier than he joined the Benetton Group as artwork director in 1982.
His survivors embrace his spouse, Kirsti Moseng Toscani, and their three kids, Rocco, Lola and Ali. Mr. Toscani was married twice earlier than and had three different kids. Full data on survivors was not instantly obtainable.
In his ultimate months, Mr. Toscani advised the Corriere della Sera that he had misplaced weight whereas being handled for amyloidosis and that his sense of style had declined. Wine tasted completely different to him, he mentioned. “I’m not fascinated with dwelling like this,” he added.
However in September, he traveled to the Museum fur Gestaltung Zurich for a serious retrospective of his work referred to as “Oliviero Toscani: Images and Provocation.” It closed simply over per week earlier than he died.
“I’ve came upon that promoting is the richest and strongest medium present at the moment,” he advised The Instances in 1991. “So I really feel accountable to do greater than to say, ‘Our sweater is fairly.’”
Elisabetta Povoledo and Matthew Mpoke Bigg contributed reporting.
