NY, NY (5th Ave)
The late Alexander McQueen would have relished this theme, and not only because one of the dresses that still bear his iconic name (under the direction of Sarah Burton) from the Spring 2012 feature in one of the window this holiday season.
The window that features McQueen’s dress places a white mannequin – a human/mermaid hybrid, dressed in a white-feathered garment. Land and ocean are met amid the woman in the center in a scene of disarray, but deliberately so, as the mosaicked sea creatures surround the triumph of the image: an angelic woman surrounded by the clutter but beauty in the underwater realms of the world.
Mirroring the holiday craze and chaos, but luxurious nature of Fifth Avenue, the windows created by David Hoey and Shane Ruth, bring the concrete jungle of New York back to the nature and wilderness of the world.
—Kate Racovolis
“Carnival of the Animals” is the theme for this year’s windows along 5th Ave at the women’s side of Bergdorf Goodman. Very lush with hundreds/thousands of intricate details. You could easily spend hours dissecting them (the windows, not the animals). I previously posted a sneak preview here. For more detailed information, the official BG press release follows the gallery.
Click on thumbnail to view gallery.















































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OFFICIAL BG PRESS RELEASE
The holiday windows at Bergdorf Goodman, a true New York holiday spectacle, continue their well-known tradition of high fantasy, dramatic surprises, extraordinary fashion, and great storytelling. The 2011 windows, entitled “Carnival of the Animals,” take their inspiration from diverse settings reimagined in various materials… and the animals that dwell there. David Hoey, Senior Director of Visual Presentation, and team devote an entire year to the production of the holiday windows. They will remain on display through January 3, 2012.
Starting from 57th Street, each of the five main Fifth Avenue windows examines the theme from a different perspective:
Built around a vintage collection of mixed-metal birds and jungle animals, “The Brass Menagerie” is set in a stylized tropical forest of metal and mirror and glimmers with leafy foliage of brass and steel. Within this forest is a fantasy recording studio, with vintage microphones and a brass “primate” jazz combo. A giant brass birdcage houses a surprise tenant, and the floor is covered several inches deep with a secret quantity of copper pennies. For this window, a special dress was created by Naeem Khan.
“Breaking the Ice” invites viewers to a mid-afternoon arctic garden party whose guests include “couture plush” animals such as polar bears, a moose, an arctic mountain goat, a seal, and a of pair wolves. All the animals have been upholstered in luxe white textiles and appliquéd with icy crystals, beads, and sequins. A Baccarat chandelier adds luster. The party hostess is the focus of attention in her specially designed dress and one-of-a-kind cape, all by J. Mendel.
Completely encrusted with hand-cut Italian mosaic tile, this intensely blue window is truly an undersea fantasy. A single mannequin, in a seashell dress from the Alexander McQueen Spring 2012 collection, appears to be floating amid a massive collection of mosaic sea creatures. Everything is highly patterned, with swirling textures and oceanic colors. “Testing the Waters” is quite the aquatic triumph as its production was 10 months in the making and is the most labor-intensive single window display in Bergdorf Goodman history.
“Teacher’s Pets” takes viewers inside a 3-dimensional paper classroom filled with black and white paper animals, including a life-sized paper zebra, ostrich, panda bear, aardvark, white peacock, and more. As the “students” pose within a cascade of zoological textbooks, the teacher – dressed in a black and white lace Marchesa gown – presides over the paper bestiary. Noted New York calligrapher, Bernard Maisner, provided hand-lettered labels, in Latin, for all the animals.
In the final window, “Artists and Models,” a diverse collection of wood and leather folk-art animals from all continents gathers together. The setting is a sculptor’s studio out of a folk tale, with an enormous assemblage of wooden creatures. A mannequin, dressed in a mélange of designers, assumes the role of sculptor, assisted by several antique wooden artists’ models and by a quartet of antic leather monkeys.
ABOUT BERGDORF GOODMAN
Bergdorf Goodman, founded by master tailors Edwin Goodman and Herman Bergdorf, is located on the corner of New York’s Fifth Avenue and 58th Street, the former site of the Cornelius Vanderbilt mansion. Bergdorf Goodman: The pinnacle of style, service, and imagination, since 1901.
For more information, contact:
Jessica Gioia-Zotts, 646.735.5332 Jessica_Gioia-Zotts(at)bergdorfgoodman(dot)com
One Up Close (mouse over to zoom)


WOW! Thank you so much for these gorgeous photos of the BG windows. I look for your posts every holiday season since I discovered you; and I have read all the back posts as well. This is (well, almost) as good as being there, and a whole lot less expensive! Your eye for the beautiful and dramatic is superb. Your camera is magical! Thanks, Rudy, and happiest of holidays to you! Mo in KCMO
Thanks Mo. And have a great holiday yourself!
Rudy