Costume’s Cultural Reveal
The Los Angeles County Museum aims to draw new visitors and historic insights with a landmark costume acquisition
- By Jeanne Maglaty
- Smithsonian.com, March 06, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
In contrast to the museum's "lobster-pot" bustle and bizarre pannier, which puffed out a woman’s skirt several feet beyond both hips, the collection also contains an early-20th-century unstructured brassiere with a delicate appliqué of blue flower petals. France’s Paul Poiret designed it for his wife and muse, Denise. “Arguably, he is the designer who helped do away with the corset,” Takeda says. “He made such a dramatic shift in that day.”
Another article of clothing, a men's knitted waistcoat from the French Revolution era of the 1790s, could be considered a precursor of today's political T-shirt. Its lapel features the motif of a butterfly having its wings clipped by nearby scissors. "Women did the knitting and women were also a big part of the start of the revolution... It's about not dressing like a royalist," Takeda says.
The collection, bought with funds from philanthropist Suzanne Saperstein and other donors, came from Martin Kamer and Wolfgang Ruf. "One from London, one from Switzerland. They had been in the business 25 years. Both had their own private collections. They had been rivals before," Takeda says.
“Everything was in good to very good condition, she says. “It was kind of a no-brainer in terms of trying to pursue it.”
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