Some of the biggest names in Italian fashion bookended a shorter, tighter Milan Fashion Week, beginning with Prada and ending with a surprise Gucci protest.
Here are key takeaways from the Spring-Summer 2020 event.
The moment
At the time, so many people searched images of the garment that Google was inspired to create Google Image Search.
At the end of her show, which riffed heavily off the green palm print so synonymous with that gown, Versace's voice came over the sound system: "OK Google, now show me the real jungle dress."
Jennifer Lopez walked the runway at the Versace show during Milan Fashion Week Spring-Summer 2020. Credit: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images
On cue, J.Lo herself emerged onto the runway in a new version of the dress and once again sent the social-media into meltdown.
Elsewhere, several other designers exhibited their Spring-Summer 2020 collections in venues that also showcased Milan's stunning architecture.
Her mother, Missoni creative director Angela Missoni, took over the Bagni Misteriosi open-air swimming pool, and Marco di Vincenzo became the first designer to make the sun-dappled banks of the Navigli Canal his catwalk.
At the Gucci Spring-Summer 2020 show, model Ayesha Tan Jones held her hands up, where she had written, in protest: "Mental health is not fashion". Credit: Jacopo Raule/Getty Images for Gucci
Alessandro Michele's Gucci show was a fashion moment to remember too, although for reasons he probably did not predict.
Interested by the notion of humanity and uniforms, Michele sent models down a conveyor belt runway wearing variations of white straitjackets, which the designer said were "the most extreme version of a uniform dictated by society and those who control it."
The artist
1/20 – Moschino Spring-Summer 2020
Kaia Gerber models for Moschino's SS20 show. Scroll through the gallery for other highlights from Milan Fashion Week. Credit: Jacopo Raule/Getty Images
Designers indulged their artistic inspirations as the relationships between art, lifestyle, craft and fashion merged again this season. At Moschino, Jeremy Scott was in the midst of his Picasso period, with painterly brushstrokes paying tribute to his icon's work. Never one to shy away from statement, Scott featured model Cara Taylor inside a giant gilt frame in his finale.
Bella Hadid walked the runway at the Moschino show as Picasso's harlequin. Credit: Pietro D'Aprano/Getty Images
Less literally at Bottega Veneta, Daniel Lee -- gaining confidence with his second collection for the house -- referenced Matisse in his new soon-to-be-cult monkey and pineapple prints, while over at Jil Sander, designers Luke and Lucie Meier's conceptual designs incorporated macramé, raffia, crochet and basketweave appliqué. The latter was a persistent undercurrent throughout the week with Sportmax, Tod's and Missoni -- among others -- all tapping the trend.
The future looks bright
Milan's designers may not have had pressure from the likes of Extinction Rebellion to address its carbon footprint, as London had the week before, but many took their moment in the spotlight to address the issue of sustainability.
Prada's Women Spring-Summer 2020. Credit: Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images
At Colville, recycled boat sails had been made into deliciously crunchy wind breakers. At M Missoni, the majority of the collection was made from repurposed fabrics from the family archive.
And at Stella Jean, fabrics were embroidered by the Chitral Women's Handicrafts Center in Kalash, Pakistan, to help preserve traditional methods and provide the community with income.
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