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Pop Queen
Kylie goes on show at British museum
From Paul Majendie
LONDON—Soap star, pop princess and now art icon. Kylie Minogue is to
become the first pop star to have an exhibition dedicated to her at
Britain’s venerable Victoria and Albert Museum.
The exhibition illustrates why chameleons like Minogue and Madonna
manage to stay at the top in a notoriously fickle business where
fashions change at such bewildering speed.
“This is our first exhibition dedicated to a pop star,” a spokeswoman at
Britain’s top museum for the decorative arts told Reuters.
“We felt it was great to launch it because the V and A is a museum of
fashion and design. It is interesting to see how she has crafted her
image using her wardrobe.”
The exhibition, which the museum hopes the Australian star will open
next February when her world tour comes to Britain, highlights how much
her image has changed.
On display are the overalls she wore as Charlene in the Australian soap
opera “Neighbours” in 1988 which first put her in the public spotlight
alongside the gold lame hotpants she sported in the video for her 2000
hit single “Spinning Around.”
The exhibition was created and designed by the Arts Centre in her
hometown of Melbourne and includes material that she has donated
herself.
Grammy Award-winning Minogue returns to the stage in Australia on
November 11 to resume the tour she was forced to abandon last year after
being diagnosed with breast cancer.
The 38-year-old singer underwent successful surgery in Melbourne in May
2005 and a course of chemotherapy in Paris where her French actor
boyfriend Olivier Martinez has a home.
She has just launched her first children’s book, joining Madonna and a
long list of celebrities penning tales for the young.
In an interview with Reuters in September after attending a Dolce and
Gabbana fashion show in Milan, the petite pop diva promised to wear her
trademark glittery outfits on the forthcoming tour.
Sitting on a bench between designers Stefano Gabbana and Domenico Dolce,
she said it was great to be “with guys I know and love and to be
creative again.”
The exhibition, which will display dresses and hats from her nine tours,
is part of a growing trend in the British capital to put on shows
devoted to pop stars.
The National Portrait Gallery is displaying photographs and album covers
from The Pet Shop Boys and Proud Galleries’ Camden gallery has an
exhibition dedicated to the group Queen’s flamboyant frontman Freddie
Mercury who died of AIDS in 1991.
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