Monday, March 4, 2019
Beyond Beyond Fashion
There is a trick of my writing teacher When we  civilization reading an essay, first he asks What is it ab out?  We answer, then he asks If thats  non what the essay is about, then what is it about?  So we answer  again, striving to  splosh out every drop of intelligence out of our brain cells. Repetitively,  later we  ar willingly tortured by this same question for  tercet more rounds, the essence of the essay shows up. This was exactly the same feeling I received from the  arrangement Charles James Beyond Fashion, displayed by the Costume  basis of the Metropolitan Museum ofArt. Throughout the  exhibition, I was asked this question over and over again If   bearing is  non what the exhibition about, then what? Started from Maya and lasting until August 10, the  modified exhibition of Costume Institute of Metropolitan Museum presents the audience signature  speckles of Charles James, an Anglo fashion designer who was active during the post-WWW 20th century in America. The exhibition    is held in the special exhibition galleries on the Museums first floor and The Costume Institutes Anna  overwinter Costume Center on the ground floor, including  angiotensin-converting enzyme small supplementary hall  video display documents.Fifteen evening ball gowns and about fifty ready-to- wears  are displayed. With intricate costumes, James first of all stood out as a king of fabric sculptor without crown beyond the simple  interpretation of a fashion designer who made clothes that fit in the trend. The costumes were indeed amazing- quoting the most commonly  apply word of the visitors. James  reliable spiral cut, almost seamless design and the free draping technique are still  non nearly comparable in the present day.They were not Just fashion, but sculptures that go around human body with  sound artistry and could stand the test of pure aesthetic examination. However, if the costumes were examined even beyond their tags of fashion and beyond their sculptural appearances, the    intention of these designs was actually in  both(prenominal) degree provoking, if we examine the  citations of James that were written on the walls of the halls. A quote of James revealed that his ideal of fashion was largely sexual. The feminine  envision, he believed, was as such wrong.Thereby he claimed, All my seams  confirm meaning, they emphasize  any(prenominal)thing about the body.  In this way, he striver to perfect the  effeminate body, however destroying the natural  sweetheart of female odd at the same time. As a result, the  unconditional  need beyond the fashion appearance of these designs was sexism aesthetics of the traditional malpractice, which should have been eliminated a long time ago. James fastidious and male-centric aesthetic of female figure beyond his  business leader as an artist was further revealed by  flesh out in his designs. In the actual practice, James overemphasized the female parts.First, the  transcend  set up into sharp and pointing horn. This d   esign was made possible by darts of the gowns tops following the traditional Rococo corset, which once made the teenage arils and  juvenility wives waistlines tiny but at the same time cruelly took  off many of their lives. At the same time, the bottoms of gowns spread widely. Either the gowns had big  strength of piled-up drapes on the hip, or they were supported directly by two bustles, which was  in any case a typical classic masculine aesthetic that addressed females ability of bearing kids.Overall, James costumes remade a womens body into a funnel shape. In addition, the bosoms were  kinda shaped as c anes, which presented women lasciviously. Even in the  straightlaced times, this male-dominant esthetics was giggly  arguable for these characteristics defined females simply attractive in the way of a  sound reflection and bearing machine. In the post World War II America,  afterwards the liberation of female body brought by the H dresses, this Victorian renaissance was a recess    that brought female back into the prison of clothes.Rather, in todays aspect, these aesthetics of female body are morbid. For females, it is the blood and tears in females costume history. These characteristics, as beautiful as some might consider, are dross of the Victorian culture that should never be reused to improve he figure or even hinted in a modern design. I have to say, peeking into the  motor of the designer, I saw an egocentric though man who are  supreme in the way he examining females. Finally, the end of the exhibition explored what truly was beyond this fashion designer Charles James explored even deeper.Beyond a fashion godfather, a king of fabric sculpturing, and a self-involved and orthodox masculine artiest, the  documentary film hall showed James as a person. Traditional mannequins and sketches were shown. While at the meantime, the document room  in  equal manner showed he videos clips of James kissing his  uttermost model on her cheek before going on the runwa   y, and an  crucial list of celebrities and artists typed by James that James would like to design for. The  vestige of the list was playful, ironic and effusive. There were as fountainhead glowing critics,  basically eulogies.In this room, though most people do not linger in it, the most interesting information what the artist was available, and it gave anyone who wanted to look deeper into the motive and inspiration of him a lucid answer genially eccentric, Charles James boldness and  high-handedness toward  in that respect led to his unceasing pursuit of perfection and the exploration of impossibility, which explained his  move designs and the elaborate way of fabricating the costumes. As an exhibition of the Metropolitan museum, there were some commendable displaying methods in this exhibition indeed.The exhibition started with a theatrical opening. At the entrance, the  homo darkened down, and with the wall showing the name of the exhibition and a classic walking mannequin (a wo   man-shape body model) of James, the bright outer world and the dark inside world were clearly vided. There was as if a magical twi clear up moment, indicating the arrival of something brilliant in the darkness. After the prologue, I was almost brought into Sesames studio on 699 Madison Street by muslin samples of his gowns  present around his famous butterfly sofa, recreating the scene of the studio and the salon of James.Inside the hall, the gowns were arranged in a spiral shape, going around his best- known masterpiece  trefoil Leaf Ball Gown 1953. The x-ray analysis as well as the animation simulator explained the inner structure of the clothes by showing the involutes plastic bones and complicated drapes in the layers of fabric. The application of new  technology treated fashion so scientifically -as if a real piece of architecture-that it gave even the most general audience a  retrieve to  find about the materialist word fashion in a  firm new way.On the pads that showed the in   formation of exhibits, a few hints about this sexual intentions of James designs by showing the costumes of inspiration from the Victorian time, without explaining the underlying meaning of the original design. though implicit about the word sexual, Hess pictures purposefully gave the audience a clue to the intention but still left them room to  infer that what was truly beyond fashion beside the artsy structure, allowing their own interpretation.Deliberately, the exposition of the clothes revealed the museums  appreciate to the master James, for his elaborate effort paid beneath the fabric. Furthermore, the exhibitions respect was also to the audience, as the museum brought fashion back to the ground, accessible to a general audience,  plot it respect the individual thinking by leading the audience to think about what was truly beyond cushion instead of giving out a definite answer. Still, compare to the art value of the exhibits, the display of the exhibition was fairly not a high   light.The lighting in the main halls was a disaster. Firstly, the semi-dark lighting  milieu in the black hall was a click.  canvass to other costume exhibitions at the Met Museum, this technique was so widely used that this trick did not tell anything about the artist. It was even anti-characteristic. James had a preference for dark colors. However, the semi darkness created a hostile environment for the audience to see the details. Especially since flash was not allowed, without a  passe-partout camera, I could not capture any details of the dark coats and gowns beside their silhouettes.And since the photos could not be used as long-term documents, the educational function of the museum in this aspect was largely sacrificed. Additionally, the semi-darkness also brought a sense of heaviness to the costumes. To illustrate, one of the best-known gown called Swan was named for the lightness of the peplum, which was composed of six layers of  subtle chiffon. Nonetheless, with the light   ing, I did not see the eighteens at all because the semi-dark casting light could not go through and light up the costume like natural light.Therefore, what I saw was an impenetrable broom instead of the  breezy dress, which was not influenced by gravity. Overall, the display was mismatched with the costumes, even though there were few novel techniques applied. The masterpieces were as if sunk in a  conflict platitude. The title Beyond Fashion made me feel confused and  please when I first stepped in that dark hall, yet I  matte illuminated and preoccupied when I stepped back to the bright outer world. The exhibition successfully pushed one to think about the essence beyond appearance by presenting the costumes in different layers and angles.An audience could feel the question of what was beyond fashion throughout the exhibition. The magic would not happen until the very end, where one could confidently give out his/her own answer, like the answer to  5th round of questioning of my    writing teacher. As for me, beyond fashion, beyond structure, beyond male chauvinism and beyond all his drama, I saw an aloof, fastidious, nostalgic, self- involved,  self-loving yet incredibly serious and genius about fashion  soul of this master, this man.  
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