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Against fashion : clothing as art, 1850-1930 / Radu Stern.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge, Mass. ; London : MIT, 2005.Description: 368 p. : ill., ports. (some col.) ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 0262693291 (pbk.)
Uniform titles:
  • A contre-courant. English.
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 391 STE
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Standard Loan LSAD Library Main Collection 391 STE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Missing 39002100309732

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

An indispensable guide to the historical avant-garde's appropriation of clothing as an art form; includes over 100 illustrations and an anthology of artists' writings.

The late nineteenth-century invention of "fashion" as we understand it today inspired avant-garde artists of the period to create an art form to counter commercial fashion. These artists saw clothing not as a symbol of class distinction but as a force for shaping experience--an opportunity to make things new, to go beyond the traditional boundaries of art. For many artists, therefore, dress design was too important to be left to the fashion designers; they would appropriate clothing as an art form that could break through the traditional boundaries of "pure" art to act directly on life.

Against Fashion is the history of the modern relationship between artists and this ideal "anti-fashion." Radu Stern traces the development of clothes as art by artists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He discusses contributions to the new art form by various artistic movements of the historical avant-garde, including Art Nouveau, the Werkbund, Cubism, Futurism, Constructivism, and the Bauhaus; he examines the work of such key figures as Henry van de Velde, Gustav Klimt, and Sonia Delaunay. The book includes more than 100 illustrations, many in color, as well as an anthology of essential writings and documents by artists and writers of the period, some of them translated into English for the first time. The artists and works examined display a diversity of styles and ideas, but all share the desire to reject the mercantile logic of commercial fashion and replace it with a utopian "anti-fashion."

Originally published: 2004.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Translated from the French.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Acknowledgments (p. viii)
  • Against Fashion: The Avant-Garde and Clothing
  • Fashion and Modernity (p. 2)
  • Romanticism: From Eccentricity to Artistic Dress (p. 4)
  • Rational, Artistic, and Aesthetic Dress in England (p. 5)
  • Henry van de Velde and Germany (p. 11)
  • Klimt and the Wiener Werkstatte (p. 23)
  • Futurism and Dress (p. 29)
  • The Russian Avant-Garde and Dress (p. 45)
  • Sonia Delaunay (p. 63)
  • Notes (p. 69)
  • Texts
  • The New Dress (p. 80)
  • Dress Reform (p. 82)
  • A Lecture on Dress (1868) (p. 83)
  • Development in Dress (p. 96)
  • Of the Progress of Taste in Dress in Relation to Art Education (p. 105)
  • Slaves of Fashion (p. 111)
  • Woman's Dress (p. 113)
  • More Radical Ideas upon Dress Reform (p. 115)
  • The Relation of Dress to Art: A Note in Black and White on Mr Whistler's Lecture (p. 120)
  • The Individual Dress (p. 122)
  • The Artistic Improvement of Women's Clothing (p. 125)
  • A New Art Principle in Modern Women's Clothing (p. 137)
  • Artistic Dress and Personalized Dress (p. 143)
  • On the Becoming of Fashion (p. 148)
  • Questions of Fashion (p. 151)
  • Male Futurist Dress: A Manifesto (p. 155)
  • The Antineutral Dress: A Manifesto (p. 157)
  • Futurist Manifesto of Women's Fashion (p. 160)
  • The Futurist Manifesto of the Italian Hat (p. 162)
  • The Aesthetics of Dress: Sunny Fashion, Futurist Fashion (p. 164)
  • Manifesto for the Transformation of Male Clothing (p. 167)
  • The Futurist Manifesto of the Italian Tie (p. 170)
  • Present-Day Dress--Production Clothing (p. 172)
  • Concerning Contemporary Dress (p. 174)
  • The Russian Fashion (p. 177)
  • The Constructivist Dress (p. 178)
  • The Fortnight Review: The Reformers of Dress (p. 181)
  • On Her Dress She Has a Body (p. 182)
  • The Influence of Painting on Fashion (p. 183)
  • Artists and the Future of Fashion (p. 186)
  • Illustration Credits (p. 189)
  • Selected Bibliography (p. 198)
  • Index (p. 202)

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Radu Stern is an art historian and curator living in Switzerland

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