Dior

Dior Lady 95.22 Spring 2023 Ad Campaign

Review of Dior Lady 95.22 Ad Campaigns by Creative Director Maria Grazia Chiuri with Photographer Brigitte Lacombe with models Jennifer Lawrence, Ramla Ali, Celeste, Camille Cottin, Rachele Regini, Anya Taylor-Joy, Emma Raducanu, Rosamund Pike, Beatrice Borromeo, Dilraba Dilmurat, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Dior‘s recently concluded campaign series in celebration of its Lady 95.22 handbag, captured by photographer Brigitte Lacombe, is a manifesto of the brand’s commitment to dressing exceptional women. Spanning generations, disciplines, and perspectives, the campaign invites nine women from the worlds of art, writing, sports, and more to embody the bag’s spirit of independence and allure.

Famed for her unvarnished and intimate portraits of influential cultural figures, Lacombe is an impressive collaborator who puts her skills to work in expertly conveying the celebration of contemporary womanhood that is the central focus of creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri’s work for the house.

The campaign series nails two trends that we are seeing grow as brands continue to reckon with the changes to the typical fashion communication calendar brought on by the attention economy: a multi-part digital series that can generate and maintain interest and engagement across the typically low-attention-span world of social media, and leveraging celebrity partnerships in a way that is personally meaningful and uplifts the values of the brand.

Laetitia Casta

Reflecting plural femininity, the iconic Lady 95.22 bag is unveiled in a series of shots spotlighting exceptional women, united by their audacity, spontaneity and independent spirit. Today, it is Laetitia Casta’s turn to adopt this timeless accessory, an ode to the power of fashion as perpetual inspiration. The actress and model sports the emblematic black leather creation, on which the graphic lines of cannage flourish. Before Brigitte Lacombe’s lens, she reveals her own interpretation of elegance in a selection of pared-down portraits.

A celebration of the essence of Dior style, through the prism of singularity and self-assertion.

Sharon Eyal

Revealed at the Dior ready-to-wear autumn-winter 2022-2023 show, the Lady 95.22 echoes, in its name, the year the Lady Dior was created, 1995, and the one it was launched itself, 2022. Through the striking, minimalist shots taken by Brigitte Lacombe, its timeless allure is celebrated by exceptional women, such as Sharon Eyal, representing this captivating odyssey. Thus, the passionate artistic dialogue between Maria Grazia Chiuri and the choreographer, which has led to several collaborations, continues in this mesmerizing ballet as she sports a medium version of the essential new accessory in black leather. A tribute to the expertise and excellence of the Dior Ateliers, this object of desire combines the emblematic macrocannage with the graphically distinctive maxicannage motif, further enhancing its architectural form. A unique encounter offering a fresh perspective on the multiple expressions of elegance and femininity.

Jisoo

Blackpink’s Jisoo is the latest talented woman to join the impressive roster of Dior’s multipart campaign by photographer Brigitte Lacombe in celebration of its Lady 95.22 bag – but this installment also sees a strange omission of the series’ most important element.

The biggest K-Pop girl group in the world right now, Blackpink and its four members have become defining faces of contemporary fashion, fronting huge campaigns and sitting front row at shows, and bringing their army of fans with them everywhere they go. As such, and especially considering that Jisoo recently became a Dior Beauty ambassador, it was only a matter of time before one of these megastars joined the campaign series.

The campaign is visually consistent with the previous installments, carrying forward Lacombe’s approach of capturing her subjects in crisp, minimal, and elegant black-and-white portraiture, while the styling continues the synthesis of classic and contemporary.

But here the similarities with the rest of the campaign’s chapters end, as Jisoo does not speak in the video. For all of the other cast, an interview was the main focus of the campaign, putting the personalities and thoughts of the starring women as the primary focus as they reflected on elegance, experience, and contemporary womanhood. Why is there no interview with Jisoo? When what sets the campaign apart has been the sensitivity and commitment it’s brought to hearing these distinctive women speak, the lack of voice here means the campaign defeats its own purpose.

This palpable absence makes this entry feel a bit shallow compared to the rest, positioning it as just another celebrity bag campaign – a visually impeccable one that is certain to get Dior a ton of digital attention, but that has lost the spark of personality that made it so great in the first place.

Jennifer Lawrence

Ramla Ali

Celeste

Exuding a lovely balance of humor and elegance, British singer and songwriter Celeste draws parallels between the reflection that, as an artist, your voice actually ends up finding you (as opposed to the other way around as may be more typically supposed) and growing into her own personal style.

Camille Cottin

Fresh off of powerful performances in Killing Eve and House of Gucci – both projects that have no shortage of style – French actor Camille Cottin takes a moment to return to herself and the versatile simplicity of French elegance.

Rachele Regini

While the charges of nepotism are certainly unavoidable, Rachele Regini has been an asset for Dior aside from just being the daughter of Maria Grazia Chiuri. Working in her role as the house’s “cultural consultant,” she has helped the brand forge creative partnerships with leading feminist artists and thinkers such as writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (who also returns for this campaign) and artist Tomaso Binga.

Anya Taylor-Joy

Poised and elegant as always, house ambassador Anya Taylor-Joy took the opportunity to reflect on her multicultural upbringing, her unconventional introduction to developing a personal style, and the women who inspire her.

Rosamund Pike

British actress Rosamund Pike speaks directly to the concept of elegance that is at the heart of the campaign, and yet, as she rightly sees it of which there is a shortage of today. She connects this idea with that of empowerment, which she embodies as the freeing confidence to speak one’s own mind.

Emma Raducanu

A modern bag deserves a modern woman to wear it, and Raducanu feels like a totally unique but utterly fitting casting choice. Coming out of nowhere to win the 2021 US Open, the British tennis player matches her huge athletic skill with charm, humility, and poise, as we can see in Lacombe’s crisp and elegant portraits, and especially in the accompanying video that sees the star reflect on her ideas of elegance and success and what fashion has come to mean for her.

Beatrice Borromeo

Italian journalist and documentary filmmaker Beatrice Borromeo balances vulnerability and confidences as she reflects on putting everything into her latest documentary project. She also flips the script of the interview format a bit as she shares insight on her own experience from the other side of the camera, working with her subjects to arrive at rare moments of truth.

Dilraba Dilmurat

Superstar Chinese actor Dilraba Dilmurat reflects on bringing strength to her roles and learning strength from her roles, as well as sharing some surprisingly relatable thoughts on mostly just dressing to be comfortable. And, judging from how her video has by far the most comments – and the most international group of commenters – of the series, we can tell that her presence and personality here is resonating on a massive scale.

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Chimamanda Nigozi Adichie has had a close relationship with Maria Grazia Chiuri since the designer’s runway debut for Dior, where she sat front row as models wearing a now-famous phrase drawn from her work, “we should all be feminists,” walked to a soundtrack featuring a Beyoncé song that sampled her TedX talk. While she has made and publicly backed up some transphobic comments that we hope are not in line with Dior’s values, her reflections on storytelling, supporting other artists, and the intersection of femininity and feminism are undeniably inspiring.

Ramala Ali

Somali-born, London-raised professional boxer Ramla Ali exudes frank confidence as she talks representing Somalia at the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021 and walking into the ring dressed head-to-toe in Dior. Captured with her Lady 95.22 handbag, the athlete-activist, an advocate for women’s empowerment, also discusses being a role model for the younger generation.

Dior Creative Director | Maria Grazia Chiuri
Creative Director | Margot Populaire
Agency | Baron & Baron 
Photographer | Brigitte Lacombe
Sr Art Director | Eleonore Tisseyre
Videographer | Tess Ayano
Models | Ramla Ali, Celeste, Camille Cottin, Rachele Regini, Anya Taylor-Joy, Emma Raducanu, Rosamund Pike, Beatrice Borromeo, Dilraba Dilmurat, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie