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We live
in an era where less is more and informality is the norm. Although
we might think that very little can shock us, fashion has a
way of continually make us reassess our standards of propriety.
The clothes we wear are part of an infinitely complex cultural
system that can change with time and space. If understanding
fashion today is a delicate process, looking back in time is
a mine field, but the process is essential as few things are
more intimately linked to a person's existence and sense of
self.
The period
from 1780 to 1825 is one of rapid transitions and offers many
parallels with our times. Heavily defined by an appreciation
for strong and healthy bodies and marked by a love of nature
and the growing importance of sports, the idealism brought about
by the rediscovery of ancient Greek and Roman culture in the
first half of the eighteenth century led to changes in art,
politics and culture that affect us to this day. In addition
to igniting new interest in philosophy and systems of government,
Classicism brought back an impossible standard of perfection
and vigor to the human body. By the last quarter of the century,
two types of children's clothes no longer designed to mimic
adult garments were worn: the white linen "frock,"
a one piece dress with a high waistline and a deep neckline,
and the skeleton
suit, a bodice and trousers ensemble buttoned at the waist.
These were intended to strengthen young children's bodies by
exposing them to the elements as well as give them more ease
to play. If on the one hand children were liberated from hair
pomade and powder and from the boned stays that once molded
their bodies to achieve perfect posture, they also were immersed
in cold water at a time when baths were taken only rarely and
for therapeutic reasons. Ancient stoicism was at play and helped
to propel the child's frock to new heights.
As the neoclassical
admiration for statuesque nudity influenced the world of fashion,
women began to abandon conical boned stays and thick brocades
for thinner fabrics such as the semi-transparent muslins that
outlined the figure and helped to suggest the clinging drapery
of Classical times. The color palette became lighter and more
suggestive of the natural or "naked" look. Unadorned
simplicity came to the forefront with the emergence of the chemise
gown, brought to the world's attention in 1783 by Elizabeth
Vigée-Lebrun's scandalous portrait
of Queen Marie-Antoinette wearing what many considered to
be underclothes. After over a century of using the change of
chemise, or shift, as the means to cleanse the body in
lieu of using water, this garment was skin by proxy and, as
a result, the new gown was truly appalling to many.
Considered
immodest, indecent and a sign of social decay by some, the extreme
fashions of the late 18th and early 19th centuries expressed
the political, social and artistic unrest of their era. What
was first worn in a state of "undress" soon became
the fashion. The artifacts presented here trace the transformation
of the typical 18th century silhouette into the linear high-waist
style of the early 19th century. As described by Abigail Adams
during her European residency in the 1780s, fabrics became "as
light and thin as possible" and art and morality collided
in this new vision of the body.
Dr. Anne
Bissonnette
Curator
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