Iconic Kylie Minogue costumes added in new display in the Australian Music Vault
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, June 23, 2025


Iconic Kylie Minogue costumes added in new display in the Australian Music Vault
Installation view. Photo by Jason Lau.



MELBOURNE.- The Australian Music Vault announced a new display, Kylie Minogue: The Music Videos featuring six iconic costumes including the white jumpsuit worn in the video clip for ‘Can’t Get You Out Of My Head’ and, a Jean-Paul Gaultier outfit worn in the video for fan anthem ‘All The Lovers’. The Gaultier costume will be on display to the public for the first time in honour of the 15th anniversary of the hit.


🚀 See What Everyone's Reading! Explore Amazon's current bestsellers and find your next great read.


The new display features costumes from Kylie’s video clips including ‘Hand on Your Heart’, ‘Did It Again’, ‘On A Night Like This’, ‘Can't Get You Out of My Head’, ‘I Believe In You’ and ‘All the Lovers’. Australian Music Vault curator Olivia Jackson said: “the format of music videos – with special effects, lighting and editing – allowed Minogue to experiment with more adventurous costumes, themes and narratives that would be otherwise difficult to convey in live performance.”


🖼️ Value our daily art insights? Consider a gift to ArtDaily! Find us on PayPal or become a patron on Patreon.


Jackson said her videos have helped define her status as a global pop star with her back catalogue of videos revealing a journey through the world of pop culture, an evolution of aesthetics, personas and creativity.

“The display explores select moments from Kylie’s artistic evolution over the years. It is comprised of six costumes spanning three decades of Kylie’s career, beginning with ‘Hand On Your Heart’ (1989) and ending with ‘All The Lovers’ (2010). Kylie’s music videos have left an indelible mark on her legions of fans over the years, and this display provides an opportunity to have a close interaction with iconic costumes from these videos.”

‘Hand On Your Heart’ was the lead single off Minogue’s Enjoy Yourself (1989) album. The music video was directed by Chris Langman and shot in her hometown of Melbourne. It saw Minogue dancing through a vibrant 1980s set wearing a dress adorned with a love heart. The dress appeared to change colour as she moved through the set but was in fact three different dresses.

The video for ‘Did It Again’ was shot over a two-day period in London and featured on her Impossible Princess album (1997). Minogue wore this costume as Sex Kylie, one of the four fictionalised versions of herself that she portrayed in the video. The characters – Sex Kylie, Cute Kylie, Indie Kylie and Dance Kylie – were tongue in cheek portrayals in the media at different periods in her career. The costumes for these characters were designed by Minogue and her long-time collaborator William Baker.

‘On A Night Like This’ was the second single from Minogue’s album Light Years (2000). Directed by Douglas Avery, the video draws its aesthetics from Martin Scorsese’s film Casino (1995), with Minogue portraying the character of a neglected mob wife. This dress was worn by Minogue putting on jewellery in a limousine and then gambling at the glamorous Casino de Monte-Carlo.

‘Can't Get You Out of My Head’ was the lead single from Minogue’s seventh studio album, Fever (2001). A smash hit, it reached No. 1 in over 40 countries across the world. The video was directed by Dawn Shadforth with choreography by Michael Rooney, depicting Minogue dancing against futuristic urban backgrounds. This jumpsuit, considered one of Kylie’s most iconic costumes, was created for the video by London-based fashion designer Fee Doran under the label Mrs Jones. The design references the legendary style of Grace Jones, who was an inspiration for Minogue during the creative development of Fever.

From her album Ultimate Kylie (2004), the video for ‘I Believe In You’, directed by Vernie Yeung and choreographed by Rafael Bonachela, showed Minogue dancing in a futuristic light-filled sphere with costumes custom made by Dolce & Gabbana. The Italian designers have collaborated with Minogue on a number of occasions, dressing her for the ‘Come Into My World’ video and designing numerous stage costumes, including the Aphrodite Les Folies tour.

The video for ‘All the Lovers’ was directed by Joseph Kahn, who has collaborated with artists like Britney Spears, Taylor Swift and Lady Gaga. Filmed on the streets of Los Angeles, it features Minogue performing atop a rising mountain of moving bodies. The euphoric song featured on her Aphrodite album (2010) and has been embraced by legions of fans, who have collectively become known as the ‘Lovers.’ The costume for this video was designed by Jean Paul Gaultier who also collaborated with Minogue on the KylieX2008 tour.

The Australian Performing Arts Collection is the proud custodian of the Kylie Minogue Collection. Starting from a single costume donation in 1991, today it includes more than 300 costumes and accessories, alongside other material related to her concert tours. Spanning more than 20 years of Minogue’s career, the collection provides a comprehensive record of her extraordinary success as a world-famous performer and recording artist. The collection provides intimate access to many of the signature ‘looks’ she has created over time. Covering pivotal moments including album covers, live performances, music videos, tours, events, awards and photographic shoots spanning from ‘The Loco-Motion’ video (1989) to the Aphrodite: Les Folies tour (2011).

The new display is open to the public in the Australian Music Vault within Arts Centre Melbourne’s Theatres Building. The Australian Music Vault is a free exhibition developed by Arts Centre Melbourne in collaboration with the music industry and was a key initiative of the Victorian Government's Music Works strategy. The exhibition is a celebration of the Australian contemporary music story – past, present and future.

To see more Kylie Minogue objects, the Collection Store Tours give unprecedented behind-the-scenes access to the Australian Performing Arts Collection. Featuring a selection of original objects from more than 850,000 items spanning circus, dance, music, opera and theatre, these tours provide a unique opportunity to explore the Collection and learn more about the performers, creatives and companies that have helped make Australian performing arts history.

Also, when members of the public meet for a tour in Hamer Hall’s box office foyer, they can see a large gold painted fibreglass horse with wings known as Pegasus, which was used as a stage prop by Kylie Minogue in Act Two of Kylie Aphrodite Les Folies tour (2011).










Today's News

June 23, 2025

Art, nature, and story coalesce at A Tangled Plot: Works by Annie Blazejack and Geddes Levenson

American Estate Buyers: Breathing new life into the secondary art market

Joan Jonas's drawings take center stage at Pace Tokyo

Janet Werner's "Hell and Happiness" opens at Almine Rech Brussels

Kunstmuseum Bern releases comprehensive Nazi-looted art principles, restitutes Sisley painting

Sculptural forest blooms at Crac Occitanie: Leonor Antunes challenges art, design boundaries

"Andrew Wyeth at Kuerner Farm: The Eye of the Earth" opens at the Brandywine Museum

Mindy N. Besaw appointed Wilma E. Kelley Director of the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art

Iconic Kylie Minogue costumes added in new display in the Australian Music Vault

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston opens 'From India to the World: Textiles from the Parpia Collection'

Epic art exhibit premieres at The Museum of Flight

'The Work of Repair: Redress & Repatriation at the MOV' opens at the Museum of Vancouver

The Reading Public Museum features recent works by Puerto Rican artist Patrick McGrath Muñiz

Speed Art Museum presents first major museum exhibition of works by Gloucester Caliman (G.C.) Coxe

Kunsthalle Münster presents its summer 2025 program

New exhibition "Focus and Fatigue" explores material exhaustion and digital overload

Cabo Verde's Insular Textile Matrix: A transdisciplinary project for climate, culture & community

Andrea da Montefeltro unveils visionary "Arcana" exhibition in Frontone

New book unearths decades of art insights from renowned historian Adelina Moya Valgañón

Sound Art Korea presents Touchy-Feely: Seoul

Santa Barbara Museum of Art presents Vian Sora: Outerworlds




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful