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Hildegard Ringena >
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![CHIC! Vêtements et Élégance 1800 - 1900 Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_21520295.jpg)
CHIC! Vêtements et Élégance 1800 - 1900
La Tronche, Grenoble (F) > 17.02. - 22.07.2024
Chic! Von den Frous-frous des 19. Jahrhunderts bis zur Fast-Fashion des 21. Jahrhunderts lädt das Hébert-Museum mit zwei Ausstellungen zum Staunen und Hinterfragen der Mode ein: Kleidung und Eleganz und Denis Rouvre. Ursprünglich dazu gedacht, den Menschen vor Wind und Wetter zu schützen, wandelte sich die Kleidung im Laufe der Zeit. Sie wurde von einem Gebrauchsgegenstand zu einem dekorativen und attraktiven Kleidungsstück. Die Art und Weise, wie man sich kleidet, bezieht sich auf den Begriff der Mode, die dem Geschmack einer Epoche, einer Region oder einer sozialen Klasse entspricht. Kleidung ist auch Träger von Bedeutungen - Autorität, Macht, Beruf, Stand - und das Sprichwort "Kleider machen Leute" stellt die Realität dieser Äußerlichkeiten in Frage. Die üppige Mode des 19. Jahrhunderts spiegelt die Veränderungen einer Gesellschaft wider, die immer reicher und industrialisierter wird. Die Ausstellung Kleidung und Eleganz - 1800-1900 bietet in verschiedenen Räumen einen farbenfrohen Streifzug durch die Geschichte des Geschmacks und der Kleiderordnung der Bourgeoisie. Die kraftvollen fotografischen Porträts von Denis Rouvre, die einen zeitgenössischen Blick ermöglichen, zeigen eine beunruhigende ästhetische Übereinstimmung mit den Porträts, die Ernest Hébert (1817-1908) hundertfünfzig Jahre zuvor gemalt hatte. Diese Fotografien, die aus einer Begegnung mit der Emmaus-Gemeinschaft entstanden sind, hinterfragen unsere Konsumgewohnheiten und die subversive Kraft der Kleidung.
Text- und Bildquelle: Museumswebsite
Veranstalter/ Ort
Musée Hébert
1 Chem. Hébert
38700 La Tronche
Frankreich
weitere Infos: musees.isere.fr/agenda/musee-hebert-vetements-et-elegance-1800-1900
![Fashion City How Jewish Londoners shaped global style Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_bowie_dress_designed_by_mr_fish_c_trinity_mirror_mirrorpix_alamy_stock_photo_1600x420.jpg)
Fashion City How Jewish Londoners shaped global style
London (GB) > 13.10.2023 - 07.07.2024
Step inside a traditional tailor’s workshop in the East End and immerse yourself in the glitz and glamour of a Carnaby Street boutique at the height of the Swinging Sixties – when London was the world's fashion capital. For the first time, this exhibition will uncover the major contribution of Jewish designers in making London an iconic fashion city. Discover the stories behind the Jewish fashion makers who became leaders in their industries, founded retail chains still on the high street today, and dressed the rich and famous – including David Bowie, Princess Diana and Mick Jagger. Learn about the contribution of key figures, such as renowned wedding dress designer Netty Spiegel, master milliner Otto Lucas, the epitome of British flamboyance Mr Fish, and living legend David Sassoon. Fashion City brings together places and spaces in London with fashion and textiles, oral histories, objects and photography to weave this fascinating history, where every stitch tells a truly unique story.
Text - und Bildquelle: Museumswebsite
Veranstalter/ Ort
Museum of London Dockland
No1 Warehouse, West India Quay
London E14 4AL
GB
weitere Infos: www.museumoflondon.org.uk/museum-london-docklands/whats-on/exhibitions/fashion-city
![Colore, forma, bellezza. Le metamorfosi della moda femminile Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_solo-immagine_page-0001--1-.jpg)
Colore, forma, bellezza. Le metamorfosi della moda femminile
Genua (I) > 11.11.2023 - 30.09.2024
Erweitert bis zum 30. September ist die Ausstellung eine faszinierende Reise durch die Modegeschichte zwischen Revolutionen und Revival, zwischen prächtigen Stoffen und raffinierten Accessoires. Die neue Einrichtung der Textilsammlungen, die im Zwischengeschoss des Palazzo Bianco untergebracht ist, führt die Öffentlichkeit auf einer verführerischen Reise, um die Ideale der Schönheit und die kontinuierlichen Veränderungen im Geschmack zwischen dem 17. und 20. Jahrhundert zu entdecken. Das weibliche Universum ist die Protagonistin dieser Reiseroute, die zwischen Ost und West windigt und die Vielfalt und Bedeutung der Civic Textile Collections durch eine Auswahl einiger der 3 Tausend Werke in der kontinuierlichen Erweiterung hervorhebt, die heute eine der wichtigsten Abschnitte der Strada Nuova Museen darstellen, die Museumsstruktur, die Museumsstruktur, die sich in der Kunstgeschichte und der Genoa zusammenfasst. Luxuriöse Kleidung und Modeaccessoires, manchmal echte kleine Kunstwerke, werden mit Gemälden, Drucken und anderen Objekten aus den Civic Collections kombiniert, in einer Reihe von Werken, die durch die sehr hohe exekutive Qualität und die Verwendung wertvoller Materialien geteilt werden, die auch das tägliche Leben einer Menge von Frauen erzählen, die uns vorausgegangen sind. Diese Erzählung gipfelt in einer außergewöhnlichen weiblichen Figur und einem vollen Eintauchen in der Vergangenheit: ein Zeitraum, der der napoleonischen Zeit gewidmet ist, und einer Frau aus dem Gewöhnlichen, die aus dieser Zeit eine der Protagonistinnen war, Anna Pierino Brignole-Sale (1765-1815). Großmutter von Maria Brignole-Sale, Herzogin von Galliera, Anna, die in den gequanzen Jahren des Endes der Genuesen Republik und der Annexion von Genua an das Französische Reich lebte, stand im Zentrum des zeitgenössischen politischen, künstlerischen und kulturellen Lebens und gleichzeitig einer faszinierenden Dame, die die weltliche Szene dominierte.
Text- und Bildquelle: Museumswebsite
Veranstalter/ Ort
Musei di Strada Nuova - Palazzo Bianco
Via Garibaldi,11
16124 Genua
Italien
weitere Infos: www.museidigenova.it/it/colore-forma-bellezza-le-metamorfosi-della-moda-femminile
![Meine 20er Jahre Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_ohm.jpg)
Meine 20er Jahre
Lunzenau (D) > 02.02. - 21.07.2024
Auch 2024 wird es eine besondere Ausstellung mit der Stiftung August Ohm geben. Dieses Mal stehen die 20er Jahre im Mittelpunkt und man darf bereits jetzt gespannt sein auf die Auswahl der ausgestellten Objekte zu diesem Thema. Mit der Stiftung August Ohm wurde 2021 die großzügige Leihgabe einer mehr als 1.000 Objekte umfassenden Sammlung für mindestens 25 Jahre an das Museum Schloss Rochsburg vereinbart. Nach Abschluss umfangreicher Baumaßnahmen wird dieser Schatz im Rahmen einer neuen großen Dauerausstellung in denkmalgerecht sanierten Räumen des Schlosses präsentiert werden. Damit wird eine der umfangreichsten und bedeutendsten privaten Mode-Sammlungen Europas auf Schloss Rochsburg eine neue Heimat finden.
Textquelle: Museumswebsite
Veranstalter/ Ort
Schloss Rochsburg
Schlossstraße 1
09328 Lunzenau
Deutschland
weitere Infos: www.schloss-rochsburg.de/sonderausstellung-schloss-rochsburg/
![Statement Sleeves Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_sleeves-mfit-gres-detail.jpg)
Statement Sleeves
New York City (USA) > 24.01. - 25.08.2024
Whether puffed, ruffled, split, or sheer, statement sleeves have been a ubiquitous fashion trend for the past decade. These dramatic, contemporary creations can enliven and update a wardrobe, yet many current sleeve styles have cycled in and out of fashion for decades, if not centuries. Although sleeves can be especially challenging to make, they also inspire countless creative ideas. Statement Sleeves takes an original approach to the history of fashion. The selected garments date from the 18th century to the present, but they are not presented chronologically. They are instead organized by type. Following an introduction to basic sleeve shapes–from gigot to raglan–visitors will encounter the myriad ways in which designers have reinterpreted and remixed sleeves through variations in material, shape, embellishment, and even functionality. More than sixty styles, all from the museum's permanent collection, emphasize how sleeves hold the power to define a look–in both the past and present.
Text- und Bildquelle: Museumswebsite
Veranstalter/ Ort
The Museum at FIT
New York City
USA
weitere Infos: www.fitnyc.edu/museum/exhibitions/index.php?exhibitions=upcoming
![Designed to dry - Kitty van der Mijll Dekker X Vera Roggli Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_omslag-damast.jpg)
Designed to dry - Kitty van der Mijll Dekker X Vera Roggli
Tilburg (NL) > 27.1.2024 - 12.1.2025
Our relationship with household textiles has changed considerably over the years. In the damask presentation, you will discover more about this history and dive into the story of the - at the time - leading designer Kitty van der Mijll Dekker. This history inspired contemporary designer Vera Roggli. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, people handled household textiles differently than today. For instance, you had different types of cloths in your kitchen, each with its own function (the 'pot cloth', the tea towel, the cook's towel, etc.), the upper class would bring out the pure white damask table linen for special guests or occasions, and young women would collect all the pieces of their textile trousseau in preparation for marriage. The products were often simple in design and mainly focused on functionality. Kitty van der Mijl Dekker is one of the first textile designers of the era to change this.
Bild - und Textquelle: Museumswebsite
Veranstalter/ Ort
TextielMuseum - TextielLab
Goirkestraat 96
5046 GN Tilburg
Niederlande
weitere Infos: textielmuseum.nl/en/exhibitions/designed-to-dry
![Folk Dress - Festive Dress and Workwear Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_022wavm4xyh3.jpg)
Folk Dress - Festive Dress and Workwear
Oslo (NO) > Dauerausstellung
The independent farmer had an important position in pre-industrial society in Norway. This led to a strong focus on rural culture in the construction of a Norwegian identity toward the end of the 19th century.
Folk Dress
“Folk dress” describes clothing worn by rural people for everyday work, for churchgoing and for other special occasions. Clothes could be distinctive for the region or more generally influenced by urban and European fashion. Regional folk dress could also change over time, partly inspired by international fashion as well as a result of local innovation. Local variations in dress increased noticeably during the 19th century. In some areas, traditional folk dress was in use far into the second half of the 20th century. While fashion is usually categorized chronologically, folk dress has often been sorted according to region. The earliest portrait of a Norwegian farmer and his family (1699) shows a Renaissance influence on rural clothing. Although the portrait comes from the Hallingdal region, the clothing strongly resembles dress used at same time in other areas in southern Norway.
Bunad
Bunads are clothes with historical elements used today only for festive occasions. In some areas, there was a seamless transition from traditional folk dress. In other areas bunads adopted elements from folk dress, such as embroidery, but changed the shape and cut of the garments. Some bunads have been designed in the course of the last century, often with little or no real historical connection. There are approximately 500 different types of bunads in production today. More than 60% of Norwegian women own a bunad.The type of silver worn with traditional folk dress is still used as a part of modern bunads. As a consequence, Norway has a strong living tradition of filigree silver jewelry.
Sami Dress
Traditional Samí clothing is neither characterized as folk dress nor as bunad. An unbroken tradition exists in Samí culture and, even though Samí dress is constantly changing, some medieval traits remain. Samí dress shows great regional variety, largely following dialect boundaries.Today, a vibrant creativity is expressed both in contemporary Samí fashion and jewelry design. Simultaneously, there is a dynamic use of traditional clothing. Many Samí also combine traditional elements with modern garments, to show identity and belonging.
Textquelle: Museumswebsite, Bildquelle: @Haakon Michael Harris / Norsk Folkemuseum
Veranstalter/ Ort
Norsk Folkemuseum
Museumsveien 10, Bygdøy,
0287 Oslo
Norwegen
weitere Infos: norskfolkemuseum.no/en/folk-dress
![Dressed with pride Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_skm_perusnayttely_komeasti_juhlaan_kansallispuku.jpg)
Dressed with pride
Jyväskylä (FI) > Dauerausstellung
The Dressed with Pride section at the National Costume Center of Finland presents traditional outfits from different parts of Finland in various eras. The exhibition also explores the history and the manufacturing methods behind the costumes. The exhibition draws attention to the remarkable level of detail in the costumes: flax and wool fabrics, pewter brooches, colourful stripe patterns on the skirts, headgear, pockets…
Finnish national costumes replicate peasant festive costumes from the 18th and 19th centuries. They continue the popular festive costume tradition, which includes skilfully crafted accessories from felt hats to bonnets, felted wool capes to silk aprons – all hand-decorated using elaborate techniques. Traditional festive costumes often combine various craft skills as well as typical features and materials from different eras. Parts of the costumes were home-made, parts bought or tailor-made by professionals. This tradition lives on in national costumes. The exhibition also raises questions. What happened to these carefully crafted items when they were no longer used?
Text- und Bildquelle: Museumswebsite
Veranstalter/ Ort
The Craft Museum of Finland
Kauppakatu 25
40100 Jyväskylä
Finland
weitere Infos: www.craftmuseum.fi/en/craft-museum-finland/exhibitions-and-events/permanent-exhibitions/dressed-pride
![Unpicking Couture Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_unpicking-couture.jpg)
Unpicking Couture
Manchester (GB) > 21.07.2023 - 12.01.2025
Unpicking Couture premieres spectacular high-end fashion which has recently entered Manchester Art Gallery’s collection. Created by influential designers and fashion houses, each outfit represents a groundbreaking moment in fashion and includes works by Christian Dior, Elsa Schiaparelli, Azzedine Alaïa, Cristobal Balenciaga, Pierre Cardin, Vivienne Westwood, Yohji Yamamoto, Bruce Oldfield and Alexander McQueen. This exhibition celebrates pioneering creativity and design. The two main themes of the show are: investigating the links between fashion and emotions, in the form of dopamine dressing which encourages dressing for joy, and focusing on repair and restoration, inviting us to consider the lifecycle of a garment and the way it is valued and cared for. The exhibition will reveal the recent restoration of a 1930s silk velvet jacket by Italian couturier Elsa Schiaparelli, Unpicking Couture promotes sustainable approaches to repairing and preserving much loved and well-worn clothes. The garments will be on display for the first time. They were acquired through a National Heritage Lottery Fund Collecting Cultures grant from 2015-20. Unpicking Couture will expose the work that underpins the care of dress collections through a mediative film that captures the process of dress mounting and how the craft and skill involved, mirrors the work of dressmakers and couturiers. Innovative display techniques have been developed in conjunction with Dr. Jeff Horsley from the Centre for Fashion Curation, London College of Fashion and Dr Angela Piccini from the School of Art, Design and Architecture, University of Plymouth, including dynamic visual and spatial strategies and a focus on the making of the exhibition. These lively modes of presentation provide encounters for fashion as stimulation and immersion, enabling slow looking and inspiring conversation. Part display and part studio space, Unpicking Couture activates ideas around the value and care of collections, sustainability, expression of self, making and creativity.
Text- und Bildquelle: Museumswebsite
Veranstalter/ Ort
Manchester Art Gallery | Gallery of Costume
Mosley Street,
Manchester, M2 3JL
GB
weitere Infos: manchesterartgallery.org/event/unpicking-couture/
![The Theatre King Bild 1](/images/stories/flexicontent/s_livrustkammaren-teaterkungen-drakt-1920x1080-3-1-1536x864.jpg)
The Theatre King
Stockholm (S) > Oktober 2023 - Dezember 2024
Experience the splendor, power, and theater costumes of Gustav III's era. For the first time, around fifty unique costumes from The Royal Swedish Opera and The Royal Armoury are displayed together in an exhibition. Join us on a costume cavalcade! The exhibition takes you through the magical world of theater of the Gustavian era. An epoch where the passionate so-called "theater king" Gustav III created an outstanding atmosphere around culture. Where the theater became a space for splendor and spectacle, as well as a tool to wield for political and royal power. The Theatre King is an exhibition in four acts that begins with Gustav III’s resplendent silver coronation costume. It shows the royal cultural life that flourished in the 18th century, with music, dance, artists, grandiose outdoor spectacles, court life and tournaments. The exhibition ends with a costume from Verdi’s opera Un Ballo in Maschera. In this costume, fact and fiction are woven together in a finale worthy of a Theatre King.
Text- und Bildquelle: Museumswebsite (Foto © Jens Mohr)
Veranstalter/ Ort
Livrustkammaren
Slottsbaken 3
11133 Stockholm
Schweden
weitere Infos: livrustkammaren.se/en/the-royal-armoury/exhibitions/the-theatre-king/
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