Riccardo tisci gay
Kanye West Gay? Creator Riccardo Tisci Reveals He Had Affair With 'A Bloke Who Is Known'
As Kim Kardashian's birth date approaches, there's been some grimy (couture) laundry of boyfriend Kanye West making headlines in the past limited days.
After Givenchy creator Riccardo Tisci opened up about his best sexual exposure in "Vogue Homme," rumors sparked that he was referring to the notable rapper.
"I have several but the one I think immediately is an exposure I had with a man who is known. I never imagined that something could come about between us and it's still the hottest weekend of my life," revealed Tisci. "Nobody really knows if this guy is direct or gay, it is a mystery. However, I was attracted to him, his way of speaking, thinking, walking, dressing. I admire what he does as an creator. This weekend both, this intimate moment has only reinforced my attraction to him."
After the steamy confession, rumors were fueled even more by the reality that the artist and West are very good friends. In fact, Kanye has spent the past few months living in Paris, where Riccardo resides. The rapper insisted that he needed to live in France so he could work on his new album.
Meanwhile
10 Things We Learned From Riccardo Tisci’s Cover Interview
Fashion & BeautyBehind the Pages
From his unswerving adore of Britain to that of his family, here are ten definitive proof from AnOther Magazine’s new cover story with Burberry’s brand-new emperor
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1. While Tisci’s schoolmates wore Emporio Armani, Tisci went to school in his sisters’ hand-me-downs. Often, they were pink. “Funny, though, because I never really suffered. My home was heaven. My mother was incredible. She never made us undergo different, and I used to reach home from academy, play with my sisters, watch them getting dressed to go out. I was safe at home… happy.”
2. It was the UK and its welfare system that gave Tisci the launch to his career – for which he remains eternally grateful. “You understand, income support, my apartment paid for. This country gave me the opportunity, even though my English was bad.” He still took on casual function – as a doorman at former high-street chain Notice One and as a shop assistant at Monsoon – and worked in the London studio of fellow Italian Antonio Berardi. When reminded that such assistance would not be offered to a fledgling creator of his background, howev
Riccardo Tisci is an Italian fashion designer and the Creative Director for Givenchy.
“I was gay from birth; I was always nice with that,” said Tisci during an interview with Style.com.
However, while he is openly gay, he may not be exactly expose about all the men in his life.
Riccardo Tisci provided his own blind item about a famous but mysterious lover during a Vogue Hommes International interview that in 2011.When asked to describe his “best” sexual exposure, Tisci replied:
“I have several but the one I think immediately is an experience I had with a man who is known.
I never imagined that something could happen between us and it’s still the hottest weekend of my life.
Nobody really knows if this guy is unbent or gay, it is a mystery.
However, I was attracted to him, his way of speaking, thinking, walking, dressing.
I love what he does as an artist.
This weekend both, this intimate moment has only reinforced my attraction to him.”
A “Man who is known”?
Who is this mysterious, esthetic Voldemort-like lover?
Dare we speak his name?
BG Note: Men’s Vogue folded in 2008, but there are still a few international editions – like France’s Vogue Hommes International – t
Riccardo Tisci
I’ve always been obsessed with . . . mermaids and Minotaurs, because they are trapped in an animal body. And I felt trapped in my own life. riccardo tisci
In the ’50s and ’60s, Hubert de Givenchy’s friendship with Audrey Hepburn was powerful programming—a personal and creative bond that dusted the designer’s business, from the couture shows to the department stores, with that ineffable Hollywood glitz, and swaddled the actress in the most chic airs (and, obviously, clothes) then available. All these years later, Riccardo Tisci—Givenchy’s most direct successor in this mode and, fittingly, the creative director of the house that still bears his name—has similarly forged powerful partnerships with artists, brands, and the famous faces of today to create a collaborative sum greater than its parts. Consider the label’s spring runway show on September 11, in the shadows of the newly occupied One World Trade Center in downtown Manhattan: Along with Marina Abramovic, the show’s art director, Tisci created a fashion week event with red-carpet-level hype and glamou