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K**S
Fashion on Parade: Dressing up for the Impressionists
This is the catalogue that accompanies the exhibition of the same name at the Musee d'Orsay in Paris until January 2013 and which will then be at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art (February to May) and finally at the Art Institute of Chicago (June to September), its primary organizer. While acknowledging the work of previous scholars who have examined the place of clothing in nineteenth-century culture, the museum directors tell us that this is the first major exhibition to focus on the role of fashion in the paintings of the Impressionists and their contemporaries. The catalogue is a big book (336 large pages) with reproductions of eighty major figure paintings and some sixty additional canvases, pictures of fashion plates, photographs of period costumes and accessories and of shops and the new department stores, caricatures and popular prints, etc., etc.,--the jacket text says there are 478 color illustrations. Recognized experts from the fields of art history, photography, fashion studies, and literature present thirteen essays on topics ranging from "Fashion en Plain Air" and "Fashion and Intimate Portraits" to "Shops versus Department Stores" and "Fashion and the Press"--i.e., some of the essays are quite directly related to painting while others deal with more tangential aspects of the fashion industry. Apparently that is as it should be, for if there is one thing the catalogue makes clear, it is that the entire complex of fashion--from the manufacture of textiles to the new synthetic dyes used to color them to the designers thinking up new styles to the seamstresses making them to the advertising people promoting them to the shop girls selling them to the women wearing them and the painters painting the women wearing them--all of this was of a piece, and it was all one comprehensive and self-conscious enterprise under the emblem of modernity. Not only was fashion important to the Impressionists, it was central to their artistic agenda: "The latest fashion," Manet himself declared, "is absolutely necessary for a painter. It's what matters most" (243). And so Manet accompanied Berthe Morisot on her shopping trips, as Degas did the rounds of the milliners' boutiques with Mary Cassatt, and Renoir made his collection of hats--all these practical activities encouraged by the preoccupations of the best and brightest cultural theorists and critics of the time--Baudelaire, Mallarme, Theophile Gautier, the Goncourts, Zola--all of whom were deeply concerned with the coincidence of costume and character in their society and wrote extensively about it.Even though, just a year ago, Colin Bailey called attention to Renoir's use of fashion catalogues and magazine advertisements to make sure his models were up to date (in "Renoir, Impressionism, and Full-Length Painting"; see the review on this website), I for one had never paid much attention to this aspect of the paintings. But from this book we learn that we should, because it modulates our understanding of them. It's not stated so bluntly anywhere in the essays, but an implicit example of a shift in focus might be Monet's wonderful "Women in the Garden" from 1866 (the jacket illustration is a detail of this painting): whereas before one might have viewed it naively as four women wearing magnificent summer dresses, we can now understand that it is at least as much a painting of four great dresses clothing the women (the dresses representing different styles popular in 1866, as illustrated in the fashion plates accompanying the discussion of the painting), a realization that adds another dimension of meaning to the work. Most of the topical discussions are followed in this way by a close analysis of a single painting, thus exemplifying the general with the specific. In addition, there is a nine-page compendium of "Key Dates in Fashion and Commerce, 1851-89," a twenty-page checklist of the exhibition in chronological order, and a couple of pages of fashion plates and exemplary "cartes de visite" with fashion photographs. The volume concludes with a selected bibliography and a comprehensive index. It is obvious that a great deal of thought and meticulous planning went into the design of this exhibition and beautifully produced catalogue, and the result is a greatly stimulating and entertaining exposure to an aspect of Impressionist painting that had previously been underappreciated. The book is filled with information and insights, and I recommended it highly to anyone interested in fashion or painting and society at the end of the nineteenth century.
P**O
Fashion "matters most," said Manet
This book is quite an education on the influence of contemporary fashion on Impressionist art. The significance of fashion was surprisingly deep in the late nineteenth century.Journalists of the era were fond of discussing "modern life." The pompous history paintings beloved of the art establishment were slowly giving way to vibrant paintings of men and women in the present moment, dressed appropriately for life in and around Paris, the capitol of modernity. Everyday life became aestheticized.This very well written book helps us look at impressionist art with the eyes of nineteenth-century viewers. It teaches us to read the clues in dress that reveal the fashionability, social status, and even the moral character of the models in portraits and genre scenes.We discover that the Impressionists were steeped in fashion. For example, Monet married a couturier. Degas liked going shopping with Mary Cassatt and painted scenes in millinery shops for some thirty years. Manet, too, had a keen interest in shopping with women friends. Renoir's father was a tailor, his mother a seamstress, his sister a dressmaker. The Impressionists' passion for textiles, trims and hats is fully explored. Many fun facts emerge about the artists...The book also discusses things like the shock value of the corset in painting; the influence of fashion illustrations on Impressionist art; the significance of portraits of women at home in dressing gowns; the vogue for Japanese objects in home décor, as shown in paintings; and the impact of Baron Houssmann's new city planning on social interactions and street fashion, as depicted in art.In the back of the book is a chronology of key dates in fashion, in case you want to know when department stores arose in Paris, when designer branding emerged, or when the bustle reached its apogee.I loved this book, with its abundance of gorgeous reproductions and engaging scholarship. It has fired my desire to visit the exhibit at the Met.
J**E
Better than the Met
Lots of great illustrations, more than a dozen scholarly articles, some of which are actually useful for the lay person...but best of all, great examples of the way that contemporary fashion appears in, and affects the work of the impressionists.The show that Ms Groom curated appeared at the Art Institute and the Orsay; it is now at the Met. If you want to get a good sense of the show, go to the Orsay site. If you can't go to the shows, and don't speak French, read this book: a delight.
V**Y
Excellent text companion to the exhibit
After missing the exhibit in NYC, I was fortunate enough to see it in Chicago at the Art Institute. This catalog pairs extremely well with the exhibit, unlike some shows I've seen (Alexander McQueen at the MET to be specific) that don't align at all with the content of the show.I highly recommend this book for those who want to revisit this amazing exhibition over and over or those who want to learn more about the influence art, fashion, and commerce had on modern Parisian life in the nineteenth century.
P**L
Fascinating essays, gorgeous pictures
This is a great resource for art and fashion historians interested in 19th century culture. The essays that make up the most of this book are detailed, in depth and scholarly, but can also be of interest for the casual reader. The topics range from photography to menswear, including fascinating accounts of how dresses and fabrics were designed and produced in Paris, from the 1860's to the 1880's. This is a gorgeous edition, with full color plates, an abundance of reproductions and some beautiful pictures of dresses from the period.
F**O
Uniform Light Source
This is a book about some of the aims and methods of Parisian painters in the late 1800s. It particularly focuses on their notions of modernity and how this influences their work. One idea considered particularly modern was a view of life as comprised of transitory moments and movements. This view, probably influenced by the rise of photography, is at the root of the emphasis in the works on fashion and public spaces. The fashions depicted are full of coded symbolism, due to the complexity of rules governing what could be worn, by whom, and at what time and place. The book is erudite and full of insight. The reproductions are universally wonderful.
星**子
貴重な図録
日本では手に入りにくい、ヨーロッパの服飾文化の歴史、画家たちが現してきた時代背景の流れが、実に良く分かる本だ。
W**E
Great book
Better than advertised, sealed as new
M**A
Superb book or catalogue
Very well put together , full of excellent color plates, a joy! A very good reminder of the exhibition which was very crowded so this is a bonus.
C**1
Fabulous!
Having been to the Impressionism exhibit in Paris this was a wonderful book to read and reflect on.Highly recommended.
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