Discovering the inspiration behind Juozas Statkevitius haute couture Spring/Summer 2013 - a painting from National Gallery London, The Tailor by Giovanni Battista Moroni - has brought a smile. Tagliapanni, painted in 1565-1570 by one of the most accomplished Italian Renaissance masters, depicts a young man in a Spanish doublet with slits, a small white collar and breeches. In his hands that rest on the table top - a pair of scissors and a scrap of black fabric. I have smiled since 1 had found the choice of inspiration witty - we live in a small country where the greatest masters of fashion, the couturiers, both native and foreign, sometimes are still called "mere tailors". I found it also ironic - since Il Tagliapanni is a very mysterious painting and, paradoxically, it depicts... not a tailor at all. It has acquired a title of The Tailor almost a century later, probably solely because of the scissors and the black fabric depicted. But to think of it - what tailor, what artisan in the 16th century could have afforded the luxury of commissioning a portrait from Moroni, one of the most acclaimed masters of his time and painter to the kings? Look at the noble, aristocratic features in the portrait; notice the redness of his nostrils and eyes. Yes, he has recently cried and he cuts not a client's garment on the table, but none the other than the mourning dress for himself... We often complain of our difficult, austere times - and still, our century is nothing in comparison with the Renaissance times - brutal wars are a faraway reality, we have conquered the great plagues, and the poverty of our times could probably seem the abundance to the ancients. Theirs were the times when the politics were conducted with the help of a poison and a dagger, and leaving to the streets in the morning no one could be sure of return in the evening, a birth was more than often accompanied by a mother's death, but still those times left to us some