^ Oh, yes. I've noticed this, too. You have the people working in Chanel avoiding all the time skeletons in Coco's closet and in a way, idealizing her, (which I understand, I mean, both from a PR point of view and also because you can love someone's work and legacy without engaging in the most problematic parts of their life) and then you have Maria Grazia talking that way about Christian Dior, which to be honest, I've always got the idea that he loved women so, so much. I think he understood his work as a celebration of femininity.
Was his work for women socially progressive enough or whatever? That's up for debate but by vocalizing it so much, it does indeed feel that she comes from a place of reaction instead of a place of inspiration.
Why can't she even express it in a middle ground kind of way? Like "Christian Dior's work was very beautiful. Times have changed and I have to be inspired by his beautiful work to design for the woman of today".
I might not like that much Harris Reed's work for Nina Ricci (another Fashion House whose history is about the idea of femininity), but I like how he talks in interviews about how femininity has changed without trashing the House's past.