Egypt Dusts Off Pyramids for Fashion, Pop and Art Shows

French fashion house Dior presented its 2023 fall men's collection in the shadow of Egypt's ancient Giza pyramids on Saturday. Ahmed HASAN / AFP
French fashion house Dior presented its 2023 fall men's collection in the shadow of Egypt's ancient Giza pyramids on Saturday. Ahmed HASAN / AFP
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Egypt Dusts Off Pyramids for Fashion, Pop and Art Shows

French fashion house Dior presented its 2023 fall men's collection in the shadow of Egypt's ancient Giza pyramids on Saturday. Ahmed HASAN / AFP
French fashion house Dior presented its 2023 fall men's collection in the shadow of Egypt's ancient Giza pyramids on Saturday. Ahmed HASAN / AFP

Egypt is using the ancient grandeur of its pyramids as a backdrop for modern pop concerts and fashion shows, hoping to boost tourism and the luxury brand sector beloved by its moneyed elite.

French fashion house Dior debuted its latest collection Saturday at the Giza pyramids, after Italian designer Stefano Ricci held a show at Luxor's dramatic Temple of Hatshepsut in October.

Dior CEO Pietro Beccari told AFP the fashion house chose the pyramids as far more than "just a useless background", drawing on Egyptian astrology for the collection named "Celestial".

Before that, American pop bands Maroon 5 and the Black Eyed Peas performed at the Giza Necropolis, where contemporary art was also recently shown at the latest Art d'Egypte exhibition.

The modern cultural push is a new direction for Egypt's image.

Long a cultural powerhouse in the Arab world, with wildly popular singers and movie stars especially in its heyday in the 1950s-70s, Egypt has set its sights on its ancient heritage to attract the global spotlight once more.

A harbinger of the new embrace of ancient culture and history was a "golden parade" last year of 22 pharaohs that crossed Cairo from an old to a new museum in a carnival-style grand spectacle.

It was part of a push by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi's government to revive tourism, which accounts for 10 percent of GDP and some two million jobs.

- 'Vital' glamour -
Showcasing Egypt's heritage in a new context "will encourage other brands and international cultural figures to come to Egypt," said art historian Bahia Shehab.

Fashion photographer Mohsen Othman agreed that such glamorous events are "vital".

Big brands like Dior "come in with a huge budget," employ local talent and "support young creators who can put Egypt on the global fashion map".

Iman Eldeeb, whose agency cast two Egyptian models for Saturday's show, told AFP it was a "long-awaited step for the fashion world in Egypt".

Egypt's luxury goods sector has grown despite years of economic turmoil that saw the pound lose half its value in a 2016 currency devaluation.

Despite the downturn, Egypt, the Arab world's most populous country, is home to 86,000 millionaires, according to the bank Credit Suisse.

"The richest one percent are enough to create demand," said public relations specialist Ingy Ismail, who advises luxury brands.

The boutiques in the shopping centers of Cairo's chic new satellite cities, she said, are "up to the standards of international luxury brands".

- 'Young creative talent' -
Egypt's bubble of super rich has helped create a home-grown fashion design scene whose pioneers have recently ventured onto the catwalks of Milan and Paris.

At this year's Paris Fashion Week, Cairo-based luxury brand Okhtein showed a resin-made bustier that evoked Egyptian alabaster at French fashion house Balmain's show.

It was a rare success story for Egypt's creative sector, where "most people are self-taught, working hard with scarce resources to try and meet international standards," said Othman, the photographer.

Ismail said the country's luxury clothing and jewelry market "has gone from under 100 Egyptian brands to more than 1,000 today", fueled by "a huge pool of young creative talent".

International events offer rare exposure, but getting them to the country is still a challenge.

"It is a big step for the government to authorize Art d'Egypte and Dior to organize events at the foot of the pyramids," the art show's curator, Nadine Abdel Ghaffar, told AFP.

- Timeless marvels -
But "promoting the country's culture" must be a priority, added Abdel Ghaffar, who believes a dedicated government body could better promote exhibitions, concerts, shows and even film production.

Shehab, the art historian, said many realize that Egypt, known for its timeless architectural marvels in the desert, needs to project an updated image of itself.

"There's more and more awareness about the need for soft power and for culture as a representation for the country," she said, cautioning however that Egypt still requires "better infrastructure" to make this happen.

The latest Egypt-themed production was a Disney+ TV miniseries, Marvel Comics' "Moon Knight," for which two entire Cairo city blocks were built from scratch -- on a set in Budapest.



UK Retailer Next Expects to Join 1 Billion Pound Profit Club

Signage on the exterior of a Next clothing retail store is seen in London, Britain, March 25, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
Signage on the exterior of a Next clothing retail store is seen in London, Britain, March 25, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
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UK Retailer Next Expects to Join 1 Billion Pound Profit Club

Signage on the exterior of a Next clothing retail store is seen in London, Britain, March 25, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
Signage on the exterior of a Next clothing retail store is seen in London, Britain, March 25, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo

Next said on Wednesday it expected to report annual profit in excess of 1 billion pounds ($1.3 billion) for the first time in its history, underscoring the success of the British clothing retailer.
The group raised its outlook again after a better-than-expected 7.6% rise in third quarter to Oct. 26 full-price sales, driven by the early arrival of colder weather this year, versus an unusually warm September and early October last year, Reuters reported.
Breaking through the 1 billion pound profit mark would cap Next's position as one of the best run retailers in Britain, having found a successful recipe combining more than 800 stores in the UK and Ireland and nearly 8 million online customers.
It also has nearly 2 million overseas customers buying through its website and many more who buy its products via third party websites, or so-called aggregators.
The strong performance, which puts it in the ranks of supermarket Tesco and clothing and food retailer Marks & Spencer as British retailers to have made a profit of over 1 billion pounds, has sent its shares up by 47% over the last year, hitting a record high in September.
The company, which is considered a useful gauge of how consumers are faring, raised its guidance for the fourth quarter by 1 percentage point to 3.5%. It was the third increase to its outlook in four months.
It said the improved sales in the third quarter along with its forecast for the fourth quarter added 43 million pounds to full-price sales and 10 million pounds to profit.
That took its profit guidance for the 2024-25 year from 995 million pounds to 1.005 billion.
Official data published earlier this month showed UK retail sales unexpectedly rose in September. However, other retailers have said shoppers remained nervous about spending on discretionary items ahead of the new Labour government's budget statement later on Wednesday.