Tatiana Cotliar

Tatiana "Tati" Cotliar (born in Buenos Aires 31 October 1988) is an Argentine fashion model and stylist.[3] She has been the face of Vivienne Westwood,[4] Valentino,[5] Versace, Proenza Schouler,[6] Prada,[7] Lanvin for H&M,[8] Mulberry,[9] Paul Smith,[10] Marc Jacobs,[11] and Nina Ricci.[12]

Tati Cotliar
Born
Tatiana Cotliar

(1988-10-31) 31 October 1988[1]
Nationality Argentina
Modelling information
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)[1]
Hair colourBrown[1]
Eye colourHazel[1]
AgencyNEXT New York[2]

Career

Cotliar was a high school student at Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires, then at CIEVYC, a cinemal school in Buenos Aires. She has directed two short films. When an agent approached her to model, knowing only the modeling of Argentina, she was not interested due to how commercial it was.[13] In September 2009, Cotliar debuted at the spring Rachel Comey show in New York, then walked for Jason Wu, 3.1 Phillip Lim, and Rodarte. She closed the spring Vivienne Westwood Red Label show in London as well closing for Westwood in Paris. Having modeled for about a year, she received her major breakthrough as the opener for one of Marc Jacobs' most critically acclaimed collections, the Fall 2010 show in New York.[14] She opened Vivienne Westwood's fall show in Paris and closed for Shiatzy Chen, Miu Miu and Emanuel Ungaro.[14][15]

COACD featured Cotliar in the top-ten newcomers of the F/W 2010 season at No.2[16][17]

Personal

She describes her personal style as boyish, like Diane Keaton in Annie Hall, and sometimes sexy and feminine like Jane Birkin. Her favourite cities are Chinatown in New York, the Shoreditch area of London, the corner cafés of Paris, and Buenos Aires.[14]

gollark: But there are *tons* of colleges around.
gollark: Food demand is constant and people pay perfectly reasonable amounts for it.
gollark: The alternate alternative would be reasonable pricing in the first place (and maybe banks doing it, but if the values were smaller it would probably be fine).
gollark: Entirely? I mean, maybe somewhat.
gollark: They're always somewhat greedy, that's how markets work; the question is how the prices manage to increase wildly without people doing much about it.

References

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