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  1. 21 de jun. de 2018 · Diana Vreeland não falava de dinheiro, falava de arte, e quando chegaram os anos 70 isso deixou de ter espaço no meio editorial. Diana Vreeland na sua sala, que chamava de Jardim do Inferno, em 1979, fotografada por Horst P. Horst © Condé Nast Archive

    • Ícone

      Diana Vreeland: "Só há uma boa vida. A que queres e a que...

    • História

      Diana Vreeland: "Só há uma boa vida. A que queres e a que...

    • Nicole Kidman

      Desde Dead Calm (1989), quando se estreou na sétima arte,...

  2. 20 de ago. de 2020 · Vreeland worked with close friend and famous New York decorator Billy Baldwin to design the apartment, famously informing him, “I want this place to look like a garden, but a garden in hell.” The end result was completely bloodred.

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  3. An interview with Diana Vreeland in New York, November 8, 1977. ...more.

    • 8 min
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    • Front Row
  4. 31 de ago. de 1975 · In expectation of the US release of Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel, we look back at the New York apartment of the Vogue editor, which originally appeared in our September/October 1975...

  5. Diana Vreeland (Paris, 29 de setembro de 1903 – Nova York, 22 de agosto de 1989) foi um ícone da moda internacional e editora-chefe das duas maiores publicações editoriais do ramo, Vogue e Harper's Bazaar, conhecida por sua criatividade ilimitada e seu forte temperamento.

  6. In spite of being extremely successful, Diana Vreeland was paid a relatively small salary by the Hearst Corporation, which owned Harper's Bazaar. Vreeland said that she was paid $18,000 a year from 1936 with a $1,000 raise, finally, in 1959.

  7. The staff granted Mrs. Vreeland glossy magenta walls, headless mannequins, elephants, and carriages, because they had come to learn that her instincts were rarely wrong. Diana Vreeland was an editor, and her approach to exhibitions reflects that fact.