This is an exciting book, excellent in its scope and rigour, immaculately edited and richly imaginative. It proposes a new approach to fashion research concerning dress, art and the body.

Peter McNeil, University of Technology Sydney, Australia

Accessible and intelligent, these lively essays take us from snapshots to a much larger and complicated picture of fashion’s enduring and multitudinal impact on material and visual culture.

Gloria Groom, The Art Institute of Chicago, USA

Fashion reveals not only who we are, but whom we aspire to be. From 1775 to 1925, artists in Europe were especially attuned to the gaps between appearance and reality, participating in and often critiquing the making of the self and the image. Reading their portrayals of modern life with an eye to fashion and dress reveals a world of complex calculations and subtle signals.

Fashion in European Art explores the significance of historical dress over this period of upheaval, as well as the lived experience of dress and its representation. Drawing on visual sources that extend from paintings and photographs to fashion plates, caricatures and advertisements, the expert contributors consider how artists and their sitters engaged with the fashion and culture of their times. They explore the politics of dress, its inspirations and the reactions it provoked, as well as the many meanings of fashion in European art, revealing its importance in understanding modernity itself.

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Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Introduction: Addressing Fashion in Art by Justine De Young
1. From the Studio to the Street: Modelling Neoclassical Dress in Art and Life by Amelia Rauser
2. Parures, Pashminas, and Portraiture, or, How Joséphine Bonaparte Fashioned the Napoleonic Empire by Heather Belnap Jensen
3. Temporalities of Costume and Fashion in Art of the Romantic Period by Susan L. Siegfried
4. Desire and Dress: Rossetti’s Erotics of the Unclassifiable and Working-Class Models by Julie Codell
5. Mourning for Paris: The Art and Politics of Dress after ‘l’année terrible’ (1870-71) by Justine De Young
6. Mannequin and Monkey in Seurat’s Grande Jatte (1884) by Emmelyn Butterfield-Rosen
7. 'But the coat is the picture’: Issues of Masculine Fashioning, Politics and Sexual Identity in Portraiture in England c. 1890-1900 by Andrew Stephenson
8. Silencing Fashion in Early Twentieth-Century Feminism: The Sartorial Story of Suffrage by Kimberly Wahl
9. Puppets, Patterns, and ‘Proper Gentlemen’: Men’s Fashion in Anton Räderscheidt’s New-Objectivity Paintings by Änne Söll
Notes on the Contributors
Selected Bibliography

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Examining paintings, photographs, fashion plates and caricatures, this book explores the meanings of dress and fashion in 19th century European art, whilst addressing issues of self-representation, modernity and politics.
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Interdisciplinary in its approach, this book features perspectives from the fields of art history, fashion studies and dress history.
Dress Cultures publishes the best international scholarship in the study of dress practices historically and in the contemporary world. Bringing into creative dialogue a wide range of approaches, titles in the series explore the aesthetic and social relationships between dress, fashion and the body. Our authors investigate dress within material culture, as a field to be explored sociologically and politically, and from the perspective of economics and local and globalised fashion industries.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781788314480
Publisert
2019-04-04
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
520 gr
Høyde
214 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
G, U, 01, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
288

Redaktør

Biografisk notat

Justine De Young is Assistant Professor of the History of Art at the Fashion Institute of Technology, New York. Her research focuses on nineteenth and twentieth-century art and literature, visual and material culture, modernism and fashion. She has written widely on art and fashion, notably for the 2012-3 exhibition, 'Impressionism, Fashion and Modernity'.