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Wearing
color is part of the human experience. From time immemorial,
colors were an integral part of the fiber of society and their
presence, or absence, served a social function. They contribute
to making us who we are as individuals and can speak of culture,
beliefs and life stages. In the days of slavery, clothing
of undyed and unbleached osnaburg fabric served to strip a person
of their individuality.(1) The somber yet saturated palette
of blues and purples of Amish clothing is part of their culture
and beliefs just as the tricolor scheme of revolutionary France.
For centuries,
colors and fashion have been linked. While observing the
uses and symbolism of different colors and the dye sources of
various shades, surviving garments presented in the exhibition
help us understand the
far reaching applications of color discoveries. Colors
have played a central role in the intellectual explosion of
science that took place in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
from the discovery of Prussian blue and the publication of Newton's
Opticks in 1704 to the landmark synthesis of Perkin's
mauveine dye in 1856. As for most garments worn through time,
a Prussian blue eighteenth-century stomacher and the many purple
gowns on display in the exhibition can be better understood
in light of the period's technological breakthroughs. The story
told in the exhibition begins at a time when few dyers were
chemists and almost all colors were extracted from living organisms,
and ends at a time when dyes were synthesized in laboratories.
Unbeknownst
to most, science and fashion have long been intertwined.
Anne Bissonnette
Curator
(1) Linda
Baumgarten, What Clothes Reveal: The Language of Clothing
in Colonial and Federal America (Williamsburg, Virginia:
The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation in association with Yale
University Press, 2002), 113, 135.
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