Showing posts with label American Textile History Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Textile History Museum. Show all posts

21 June 2015

"Wonder of Wool" exhibit at the American Textile History Museum


Coverlet, Pennsylvania, late 19th - early 20th century, detail.

From May 20 through December 31, 2015, the American Textile History Museum features a special exhibit, the Wonder of Wool: Ancient Fiber to Modern Marvel.

The show displays quite a variety of sheep- and wool-related objects illuminating the romance, and science, of this protein (animal-derived) fiber.  One highlight is a "please touch" wall of yarns as well as woolen fabrics, both woven and knit.

Adorable exhibit free bookmark - take several home. I did.

View of the Stevens gallery.

Tactile delight!

The image below is a wall collage of Green Mountain Spinnery mohair-blend yarn, from our neighboring state of Vermont. Luscious colors.

Wool takes dye beautifully.

The exhibit featured fashions old and new, including a late 19th-century catalog, and ladies undergarment, from "Dr. Jaeger's Sanitary Woolen System Co."  The British apparel company Jaeger was founded to produce long-johns based on the hygiene theories of German physician Gustav Jaeger (1832 - 1917.)

Before there was Victoria's Secret.

Up-to-date fashions.

The exhibit of modern apparel trumpeted wool's continuing role in high fashion, in part aided by the sustainability movement - sheep regrow their fleece each year.  Although I recognized some of the names represented, such as Massachusetts native Joseph Abboud and, of course, Pendleton, discoveries include newer labels Wool & Prince and Ramblers Way Farm.

After touring the exhibit we wandered into one of the educational spaces within the museum.  We were delighted to encounter the work of weaver Antonia Kormos on the classroom walls.

Classroom with looms.

Work by master weaver Antonia Kormos.

The Shepherd Boy, unknown artist, 1840's.

Although the information presented in the Wonder of Wool exhibit will be familiar to most textile mavens, it was still a treat to encounter 19th-century sheep-themed ephemera, such as this hand-colored wood engraving, from a design by an unidentified artist and sold by Boston vendor J. Fisher.   Note to the museum shop: I would happily buy a reproduction of this charming image if one were available.

01 February 2014

Color Revolution - 1960's fashion

Exhibition title.

I caught the last day of a small but fun exhibit, Color Revolution, at Lowell's American Textile History Museum. On display from September 14, 2013, until January 26, 2014, the display featured yardage, clothing, accessories as well as publications, such as Vogue, Seventeen and the trade magazine American Fabrics.

I felt every year my age, as I recognized some of the fabrics and fashions from that era, when I was busy surviving middle school, grades 6 - 8 in the American educational system. Back then, girls took home economics  - shortened to "home ec" - and boys took shop class. My formidable home ec teacher, Mrs. Bowen, whose girdle gave her excellent posture, led us through the basics of cooking and sewing.  Home ec, a casualty of a number of cultural and fiscal forces, later morphed into something called "consumer science," enrolling both boys and girls.  There was something to be said for making sure that young people, on whatever educational track, knew the basics of clothing construction, nutrition and how to feed themselves.

Pantsuit, yardage and caftan.

During the time covered by this exhibit my public school system allowed girls to wear trousers to school for the first time, but trouser-wearing women were not welcome everywhere. According to guest curator, Madelyn Shaw, the pink pantsuit in the image above allowed the wearer, if refused seating in a restaurant, say, to retreat to the ladies' room, remove the offending trousers and re-enter the restaurant sporting just the tunic top, now considered a mini-dress.  The bonded rayon pantsuit, designed by Suzy Perrette, was manufactured in New York, and this show is also an elegy to American clothing manufacturing.

Dresses, tennis outfit and yardage.

In the image above, the short pique dress that is second from the right was donated by the curator herself, and made in 1967, using a commercial pattern. Until 1986 the Bureau of Labor Statistics included home sewing as part of our gross domestic product, and this is reflected in the fact that quite a few items in the display were created by home seamstresses. Set-in sleeves were a bit of a challenge for the home stitcher, but otherwise the simple lines of popular A-line and sheath styles were easy to sew. The visual interest came from the eye-catching colors and patterns.

As you can see on the wall behind the garments above, the exhibit was organized by contemporary, color-related song titles, which continuously looped, giving an aural dimension to the display. Since I grew up near Detroit, the sound-track of my adolescence was of course Motown; I did the dishes while listening to the Supremes on the kitchen radio.

Center, 1969 dress by Geoffrey Beene. 

The hard-to-miss solid yellow dress in the image above was donated by Helen Delich Bentley, a former US representative from Maryland and an expert on maritime affairs. Yellow is now a step-child of the fashion world, but it is a color that demands attention and makes the presence of its wearer hard to ignore.

Left: Leo Narducci outfit. Right: dress of aluminized polyester film.

The allure of pleats stretches (pun intended) from the early 20th-century neo-classical dresses of Fortuny to the "PleatsPlease" line by Issey Miyake and the suit in the image above forms a link between the two.  Synthetic fibers, like the polyester used in the suit above, were viewed as time-savers for working women, as, unlike silk, synthetics could be machine-washed and, unlike cotton, did not need ironing.

The exhibit also tracked the dead-end trend of throwaway fashion, exemplified by paper dresses and gimmicky clothes like the "aluminum" gown above, produced by General Fabrics of Marion, Ohio, as a marketing tool for the makers of Reynolds Wrap aluminum foil.

While the aluminum dress is an artifact, the fashionista can still purchase dresses by now-iconic Marimekko company, begun by a husband-and-wife team in Finland, and popularized in this country by the retailer Design Research. Marimekko translates, roughly, as "Mary's little dress."

Marimekko dress in multiple colorways.

The heavy cotton fabric for these intensely-colored dresses was silk-screened, which brings us to an interesting observation.  This bright color palette was available, in silk-screen inks used on cotton and linen at any rate, in the early 1950's. Although textile color chemistry for synthetic fibers may have lagged behind a bit, there was plenty of eye-popping, even "psychedelic," color in the 1950's. So, colors we often associate with the 1960's were available a decade earlier.  For example, Tammis Keefe (1913 - 1960) designed fashion accessories and domestic linens in saturated, vivid colors during her career.

What then was the impetus for the explosion of boldly-colored, large-scale floral, paisley and abstract prints for apparel?  The exhibit hints at some of the influences - textiles designers had greater exposure to the culture and colors of exotic locales, such as India and even Hawaii, the origin of some of the garments on display.  Carnaby Street, Scandinavian designers, costume for color television and live performance would all have had an impact, too.

Left: dress by Jorot Creations, Paris, c. 1962.

Some of the personal stories associated with the garments are quite moving.  The long dress at the left in the image above was lent by Cynthia Ehrenkrantz, whose late husband, architect Ezra Ehrenkrantz, always took her measurements with him when he travelled, so he could order something made especially for Cynthia, such as this tri-acetate knit confection from Paris.

Pant-dress and swimsuit with cover-up.

While some of the apparel on display could be worn today, the majority of the garments are very much "of their time," such as the sleeveless outfit on the left, above, wide-legged trousers with tiered layers beneath a sashed tunic top.  It's a bit ambiguous whether it's a dress or a pantsuit, but the print and coloration are most assertive.  In the curatorial remarks for this dress, Ms. Shaw tactfully quotes Dorothy Liebes (1897 - 1972), a noted textile designer, "There are no bad colors, just bad color combinations."

Accessories, including scarf by Vera.

Blouse, Emilio Pucci, mid-1960's.
 
The exhibit includes items by Emilio Pucci and Vera Neumann, but, somewhat surprisingly,  I didn't notice anything by Lilly Pulitzer, who founded her eponymous company in 1959, producing clothing, in bright floral prints, that was very popular, at least in warm weather, for many women in the mid-Western suburb in which I grew up.

Center: Dress by Lanz.

The dress in the center, above, was, as noted by curator Shaw, clearly related to the style of artists such as Peter Max, but also, I think, to album covers and images such as Milton Glaser's 1966 Bob Dylan poster.  In this long garment areas of flat color ooze and puddle in a bright print so busy it's hard to determine the repeat of the pattern.

Indeed, with these large scale prints the observer loses comprehension of the fabric as having any repeat at all  - the dress is  more like a canvas for a single motif, with perhaps a partial repeat at best.  In addition, although the commercially-made dresses were factory-produced, due to the over-size scale of the fabric design, each garment would have had the printed design placed in a unique way once the garment was constructed.  It's as if the nonconformity trumpeted by the age demanded that even factory-made clothing be individualistic.

As one of the exhibit-related activities, scholar Regina Lee Blaszczyk spoke about her latest book, The Color Revolution (ISBN 978-0-262-0177-0) I didn't make it to the lecture, but I look forward to reading the book.

29 April 2013

Down the Aisle - Bridal Dresses and Narratives

Entrance to museum, Lowell.
On April 27, 2013, about sixty or so textile enthusiasts gathered for the second bi-annual textile symposium co-sponsored by the American Textile History Museum (ATHM) and the New England Quilt Museum (NEQM).  Silk: Fabric, Fashions and Quilts, the title of the symposium, explored two concurrent exhibits at the sponsoring institutions. This blog post features the exhibit at the ATHM, Behind the Veil: Brides and Their Dresses, on view from April 6 - August 11, 2013 and organized by ATHM curator Karen Herbaugh.

Worn by Mollie Canfield, 1886, and by her great-great niece Shirley Parish, 1969.

The highlight of each dress display is the accompanying narrative, the history of the dress, often paired with a photo of the bride wearing the dress on her special day. These narratives remind us that important lifecycle events, such as weddings, provoke many responses, some traditional, some innovative.

In the 19th century, women were generally married in their "Sunday best" and did not purchase a special garment in which to be married. So, wedding dresses were not white, an impractical color, and, moreover, women wished to show off material which utilized luxurious dyestuffs.  However, according to curator Herbaugh, when Queen Victoria married Prince Albert in 1840 her white gown established the "white dress" tradition. The wedding was re-enacted in 1854, with Victoria again donning the dress, to be recorded for posterity by the then-new medium of photography.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wedding_of_Queen_Victoria_and_Prince_Albert.jpgon

Wedding ensembles and their narratives.

Many of the dresses were silk, or of a synthetic material, such as acetate, which aspires to impart the luster and sheen of silk. One of my favorites, however, is the cotton dress in the collage below, worn by Mary Bodecker, a June bride in 1952. The sheer cotton has a delicate floral pattern overprinted in white ink, and a touchable sample of the fabric provides a tactile thrill.

Bodecker dress, narrative, fabric sample.

Vaillancourt gown, 1959.  

One important characteristic of the modern bridal uniform, if I may call the wedding dress a sort of uniform, is that during the all-important exchange of vows - the climax of the performance that is the wedding -  the garment is viewed from the back.  Many of the dresses had lovely details on the back, such as the oversize bow on the dress of Nyola Vaillancourt, worn in 1959, above.  Mrs. Vaillancourt liked her dress so much, she later had a doll dressed in a replica.

Judith Clarke's tiers of cotton dress, 1958.


Frances Chiungos dress, from Filene's Bridal Salon, 1945.


Curator Herbaugh recounts the tale of the train.

 One perk of a curator-led tour is that one learns more about the process of designing an exhibit and the challenges involved. As the silhouettes of wedding dresses changed over the years, these artifacts have more variation in size than do many other groups of garments. The dresses from the 1920's and the 1960's tended to have a smaller footprint than the voluminous gowns of the 1950's, for example. To plan the exhibit Ms. Herbaugh "rehearsed" the layout of mannequins and gowns using full-scale kraft paper cut-outs. 

My one minor quibble with the show is that, since the silhouettes of the dresses - bustles, tiers, oversize sleeves - are often their salient features, I think the outfits would have shown better against a contrasting background, rather than the off-white of the gallery walls. The peachy-pink of the pedestals worked well to highlight the trains and hemlines, but the white or off-white dresses in particular fade into the walls a bit. Overall, however, this is an important and rewarding show, not the least because it records and celebrates an important day in the lives of everyday women, making the stories more real than any "reality show."

Susan Pendleton dress, 1894, with "leg-of-mutton" sleeves.