Some red carpet looks are outfits. This one became folklore. When Björk arrived at the 2001 Academy Awards in a swan dress, it wasn’t just different, it was instantly a moment – if not THE moment. Twenty-five years have passed since those feathers ruffled the entire fashion world, and since then, the joke has faded, and the look is finally getting its flowers. Björk’s swan reads less like a punchline and more like a reminder: fashion history isn’t always polished. Sometimes it shows up with a beak.
Now that fashion speaks fluent camp, and the internet preserves everything, what were some of the most controversial and tabloid-bait looks of their era are now viewed in a more sympathetic light and appreciated as iconic fashion moments. There is perhaps no more fitting an ensemble for this discussion than the infamous swan dress.
On the 73rd Academy Awards red carpet in 2001, the Icelandic artist Björk stepped out in the jaw-dropping dress created by Macedonian designer Marjan Pejoski. The look featured a knee-length, A-line cut that flared into a voluminous white tulle skirt. From the top-left edge of the skirt, the swan’s neck emerged, wrapping around Björk, forming a halterneck strap, with the head resting on her chest.


Underneath, the singer sported a sheer body stocking, dotted with crystals and a nude lace bralette. And, to top it off, for her accessories, she left (or “laid”) six large eggs in her wake as she made her way down the carpet.
Though Björk had worn Pejoksi’s designs before, such as the dramatic pink embellished organza dress at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival, he was unaware of her plan to wear his swan design to the Oscars until he saw the pictures the following day. “It was a very nice surprise,” he told Vogue. He also revealed that the eggs were her idea, saying, “I really laughed when I heard that…. So rebellious at a traditional occasion like the Oscars. I respect tradition, of course, but everybody and everything deserves to be laughed at from time to time.”


Almost immediately, Björk was admonished for the dress, with members of both the fashion and general press each taking their turn to express their disapproval. “Probably one of the dumbest things I’ve ever seen,” said Canadian fashion pundit Steven Cojocaru. While the late Joan Rivers, host of E!’s Fashion Police, chimed in saying, “the girl should be put into an asylum.” Ouch.
For years after, the narrative continued in this manner, with the dress becoming a cheap pop-culture punchline. It was parodied in numerous films and TV shows, from the 2004 comedy movie White Chicks to an episode of Hannah Montana in 2007. Comedian Ellen DeGeneres even went so far as to wear a spoof while hosting the 53rd Emmy Awards. However, on what will be the 25th anniversary of the swan dress’s debut, it’s safe to say that many now view it with far kinder and admiring eyes. It’s like an early “wearable meme” before we had the language for it.
In 2014, for their Spring Couture collection, Valentino sent a re-imagined version of the dress down the runway. Given the show’s inspiration from ballet and opera culture, the reference to the dress was particularly apt. For their iteration, however, joint Valentino creative directors Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli turned the dress around, with the swan’s head now resting between the model’s shoulder blades.


Following this, in 2015, it was displayed in New York as part of MoMA’s Björk exhibition, and, in 2019, was featured in The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s “Camp: Notes On Fashion” show (left photo below). Most recently, Grazia Chiuri paid homage to the golden look again for the Christian Dior Resort 2022 collection.


In a 2007 interview with The New York Times, Björk elucidated how baffled she was by the backlash against her dress. She said, “They wrote about it like I was trying to wear a black Armani and got it wrong, like I was trying to fit in. Of course I wasn’t trying to fit in.”
From the fashion community’s perspective, thank goodness she wasn’t. Though it may not have topped the “best dressed” lists at the time, Björk’s red-carpet walk in a swan dress has proven to be unforgettable. At a time when the press was far more close-minded than it is today, the Icelandic singer took a major fashion risk both for the sake of having fun and expressing herself. In doing so, she has paved the way for similar fashion risks and shows of individuality to become not only more normal on red carpets, but also admired.