Daphne Guinness Bio, Age, Husband, Fashion, Net Worth, Revelations

Daphne Guinness Biography

Daphne Guinness is an English fashion designer, socialite, actor, film producer, and musician. She is one of the anonymous models utilized by her friend David LaChapelle in his new photography works on show at the Lever House Art Collection.

Advertisements

How old is Daphne Guinness? – Age

She is 56 years old as of 9 November 2023. She was born in 1967 in Hampstead, London, United Kingdom. Her real name is Daphne Diana Joan Susanna Guinness.

Daphne Guinness Family – Education

Her father is the eldest son of Diana Mitford and Bryan Guinness, Jonathan Guinness, 3rd Baron Moyne. Diana Mitford was the daughter of the Mitford sisters’ father, David Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron Redesdale. After Divorcing Guinness, Mitford wed Sir Oswald Mosley, 6th Baronet of Ancoats, the head of the British Union of Fascists. According to Daphne Guinness, she was unaware of Mosley’s political views until learning of his passing on the BBC News in 1980.

Growing up, Guinness lived in the family’s country homes in England and Ireland as well as in a property in Spain owned by Salvador Dalí, who was a family friend. She later lived in New York with her half-sister Catherine Guinness, who worked as Andy Warhol’s Personal Assistant.

Who is Daphne Guinness Husband? – Children

In 1987, she married Spyros Niarchos, Stavros Niarchos’ second son. The couple has three children. Her $39 million divorce settlement, acquired in 1999, was added to her Guinness inheritance. She resides in London and Manhattan with her three children, Nicolas Stavros Niarchos (born 1989), Alexis “Lex” Spyros Niarchos (born 1991), and Ines Sophia Niarchos (born 1995). She has been romantically involved with the French philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy for some years. In the February 2011 issue of Harper’s Bazaar, Guinness acknowledged to journalist Derek Blasberg: “He is obviously the love of my life”

Daphne Guinness Net Worth

She has an estimated net worth of $100 million.

Daphne Guinness House

The central London flat that previously belonged to heiress and fashion legend Daphne boasts towering ceilings and lavish decor, providing an appealing blend of classic elements and modern comfort. The three-bedroom apartment, created to the multi-millionaire’s requirements, also has a number of bespoke wardrobes, providing ample storage space for even the most vast clothing collection.

Daphne Guinness Photo
Daphne Guinness Photo

And the 2,900-square-foot house, which is just a stone’s throw away from several of the city’s most desired stores and restaurants, is now available for £7 million. The heiress to the Guinness brewing dynasty sold another property, her Fifth Avenue apartment in New York, for $14 million (just over £9 million).

Daphne Guinness Revelations

Guinness released his third album, Revelations, in August 2020. Visconti produced it, as he had with her previous two albums. According to Thomas Barrie of British GQ, Revelations has “lusher, disco-inflected instrumentation, with flourishes arranged by Visconti in strings, and parts written for more experimental, obscure instruments like the theremin and ocarina”. Guinness worked with David LaChapelle on a three-part film series called Revelations, which used songs from the album and looked at references to the Book of Revelation.

Daphne Guinness Fashion

Guinness has been a fashion model, curator, and writer. Vogue’s Christian Allaire described her as a “street style icon, producer, musician, and muse of Alexander McQueen and Karl Lagerfeld”. The New York Times describes Guinness as a “performance artist” because of her usage and experimentation with fashion. She has been on the covers of several worldwide fashion magazines, including Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Tatler, Zoo Magazine, and others.

Guinness has written numerous fashion-related items, including columns for Vogue, the Financial Times, the Times of London, and Harper’s Bazaar. She also penned the foreword for Alexander McQueen: Fashion Visionary, contributed to Dressed to Kill: Jazz Age Fashion, and co-authored Art/Fashion in the Twenty-First Century.

As a designer, Guinness collaborated with Comme des Garçons to develop a range of shirts for Dover Street Market, and she made an estimated 100 pieces for herself in 2010 with no intention of selling them. She collaborated with British jeweler Shaun Leane and Alexander McQueen to create Contra Mundum, an 18-carat white gold glove adorned with diamonds. The glove was used at McQueen’s shows and sold at Sotheby’s in 2017.

She was inducted into the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame in 1994. Guinness has staged shoots for photographers Steven Klein and David LaChappelle. Following her divorce in 1999, Guinness became more involved in the avant-garde fashion movement, building ties inside the industry. Guinness was a dear companion of the late style creator Alexander McQueen and, as indicated by Vogue, she “supported” his vocation.

In 2004, she was welcomed on as a style expert for Gucci by François-Henri Pinault. Following the 2007 demise of magazine manager Isabella Blow, Guinness bought Blow’s whole design assortment, months before it was booked to be sold by Christie’s in 2010. In 2014, Guinness showed in excess of 100 bits of Blow’s assortment at Somerset House.

In 2009, she made a fragrance named Daphne for Comme des Garçons. Guinness worked together with NARS Beauty care products as the model for the fall 2010 mission, which incorporated an eyeshadow named after her. In 2011, she delivered a 21-item cosmetics line with Macintosh Beauty care products that included blushes, lipsticks and nail shines.

She arranged a presentation at the Style Foundation of Innovation in 2011 that highlighted in excess of 100 contemporary pieces by different creators, including Alexander McQueen, Chanel, Valentino, and others, all from her own couture assortment. The show likewise highlighted The Phenomenology of Body, a short movie Guinness coordinated zeroed in on ensembles through the ages.

As a recognition for the passings of Isabella Blow and Alexander McQueen, in 2011 Guinness wearing public for the Met Function in a Barneys window; she wore a padded McQueen dress and different pieces from Blow’s assortment.