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Lithuanian
Art Museum, National Museum in Warsaw
THE
INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION
"WORLD OF THE 18TH - CENTURY FASHION"
Marking the 10th anniversary of
the Agreement on friendly relations between Lithuania and
Poland
and good neighboring cooperation and the start of the
entry of Lithuania into European Union
Vilnius Picture Gallery, 27th
April, 2004 – 23rd July, 2004
Patron of the
Exhibition – Roma Zakaitiene, Minister of Culture of the
Republic of Lithuania.
VIRTUAL
EXHIBITION
"WORLD OF THE 18TH - CENTURY FASHION"
Photographer Piotr Ligier
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Ewa Orlińska-Mianowska,
Head of the Textile Division
Warsaw National Museum
The
exposition presenting the attire worn in 18th-century Europe
seems to carry the viewer away into the milieu which can be
best represented by François Boucher’s portrait of Marchioness
Pompadour, the most notable Dame in France of the period. In
the painting her stiff graceful pose reminds of a porcelain
figurine. Her silk, very elegant dress is adorned with rose
garlands. It is a genuine French-style example of the attire
for domestic surroundings.
The best way to familiarize oneself with the design of such
attire and the fabrics it is made of is a visit to the
exhibition, where the Warsaw National Museum demonstrates a
collection featuring over two hundred garments. It includes
the 18th-early-19th century men’s garments - szustokor,
habit à la française, veste, culotte, kontusz,
żupan and those of
women - robe à la française, à la polonaise and the
light muslin dresses of the French Revolution and the first
Empire period.
The exposition of garments is complemented with the fragments
of patterned fabrics. Since they leave the depositories and
are demonstrated at exhibitions on rare occasions, they echo
the connections of the Baroque weaving craft and high art. Of
great interest are the tinted copper carvings printed in the
18th-century fashion plates. They inspired new trends in the
fashion and formed its policy. The displayed drawings
familiarize the visitor with the history of the museum
collection, its initial shape and its oldest part.
As
many as 60 mannequins are dressed in historical clothing. The
Rococo style is illustrated by footwear and the accessories of
garments - shawls, fans, gloves, purses and shoes. Walking
among the figures, which seem to have emerged on podiums from
the paintings by François Boucher, Bernardo Belotto,
Jean-Baptist Chardin or Jean-Marc Nattier, one has a good
opportunity to follow the 18th-century evolution of the
fashion, changes in style, the modification of the garment
design and its parts.
The origin of the Warsaw National Museum’s collection of
historical attire goes back to the years of World War I. The
first donations laid the foundations for the completion of the
collection. They were the fragments of private collections,
the relics of families. A wealth of interesting old Polish
garments were received from the Antoni and Zygmunt Strzełecki
collection, Wojciech Kolasiński, Franciszek Eysmond, Zofia
Lutosławska, Mari Gerson-Dąmbrowska, Gustaw Soubise-Bisier and
Marian Januszewski, a well-known collector and connoisseur of
old Polish attire, some interesting examples of townswomen’s
garments - from the workshop of the artist Józef Brandt. The
first exhibits were entered in the museum’s inventory books in
1916, the last, donated by London-based Polish artist Maria
Garszyńska-Jarosz, in 1999. In 1924, the Directorate of the
State Art Collections transferred to the museum some
theatre costumes. This collection presents great value for one
more reason - it gives the possibility of recreating its
history through the survived stamps, dates, numbers on the
linings of the costumes.
In 1946 some interesting examples of 18th-century Silesia
reached the museum. Among the most impressive rank Frederick
the Great’s vest embroidered in white thread (its lining bears
the inscription made by the hand of Wilhelmina von Bayreuth,
the sister of the King of Prussia) and the dress à l’
antique of Louisa of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Queen of
Prussia. It is made of white semi-transparent Indian gossamer,
artistically embroidered in thick cotton thread.
Court
attire was very sumptuous. The dress made of dark reddish silk
adorned with the rhythmically waving ornamentation of twisted
rose sprays and gold lace once was worn by Anna Karwowska, a
general’s wife. This type of a Sunday dress was called
“elbowshaped” as it was worn on a very wide crinoline - a
metal construction fastened to the hips, where women used to
keep their arms.
Apart from the garments worn at feasts, banquets, the
exposition also presents some more modest - for everyday wear.
Here the simplicity, however, is merely seeming, because a
variety of fabric ornamentation and the embroidery mastership
is simply amazing. The white linen skirts and shirts are
adorned with fine embroidery stitches and Saxon lace, adding a
touch of elegance and refinement to the garments.
The exposition displays the garments worn in 18th-century
Poland - a men’s three-piece suit consisting of a coat, vest
and trousers (it has survived up to now) the origin of which
goes back to the time of Louis XIV. Its main piece -
justaucorps (Fr.) - the prototype of the present-day
jacket was called szustokor in Poland. It is an outer
knees-covering garment, widening from the hips with hardened
folds at the back, buttoned up at the front, close-fitting
below the waist. The pretty long sleeves were completed with
big stylish cuffs.
In the second half of the 18th-century Poles began to wear
habit à la française (French style attire). It was a new
type of garment, slightly shorter than szustokor with
narrower sleeves, tight-fitting cuffs and a stand-up collar.
Habit was made of plain taffeta patterned silk, plain
and finely patterned velvet. The rounded off edges of the laps
at the front, the trapezium-form pocket lapels, the cuffs,
collars, folds and even the buttons covered with fabric -
everything was finely embroidered. A stable form of cutting
made possible to embroider the fabric in advance. Each of the
laps had ten or more buttons on their edges three on each
cuff, the same number under pocket lapels and two above the
folds at the back. The embroidery was in silk, gold thread,
zecchin (It. small round metal plates with a tiny hole in
the middle) inlaid with small glass beads. Habit was
more often worn unbuttoned - to show the smart vest.
A
vest was a second piece of the earlier mentioned men’s
three-piece suit. It was the most elaborated element,
fascinating one with its splendidly embroidered birds,
butterflies, flowers. The embroidery skills achieved in the
late 18th century are demonstrated by the vest with monkeys
(the identical one is kept in the Victoria and Albert Museum
in London). Artistic vest embroidery boasts hunting scenes,
even mise-en-scènes of the plays performed at Paris theatres.
Those small needlework’s alike the illustrations of
fashionable books or magazines evidenced the shift of fashion,
the taste of the people following its whims.
A third part - trousers (Fr. culotte). They were below
the knee, close-fitting at the thigh. Long trousers appeared
later, in the days of the French Revolution. White stockings
completed a general ensemble of the outfit.
The exhibition also presents quite a number of lightweight
coats (Pol. żupan)
and kontucz (Pol.) made of thicker material. They are
the examples of the national fashion with a touch of Oriental
elaboration. The style of their cut is simple straight. A żupan used to be
often made of light fabric and buttoned up under the neck.
Rich people wore silk kontusz, because Poland boasted
good local silk. The silk interwoven with gold at the
manufactures in Hrodna and Sluck was marked by a fine stylized
plant ornamentation between oblong stripes. A żupan was
long-sleeved with turned up cuffs, and a stand-up collar.
Men used to put on a kontusz over a żupan. The garment
was buttoned up at the front and had an upright folded back
collar and long sleeves with a cut. A kontusz
distinguished itself among other outfits worn in Europe by its
original cut. Its most original elements were the seamless
sleeves from armpit to elbow or even wrist, loosely hanging or
thrown over shoulder and an intricate cut of the back with the
puckered, downwards widening folds sewn at the sides of the
waist. The żupan
and kontusz intrigued Europe reminding of the clothing
worn in Oriental countries. They enriched fashion designers
with new ideas, influenced the trends of the official fashion.
The dress à la polonaise also reminded West Europe of a
Polish wear.
A
several-layer garment robe à la française (Fr. robe
- a dress) consisting of a petticoat, a thrown open dress
at the front and a train of wide folds falling from the
shoulders at the back dominated the women’s fashion in the
mid-18th century. In the women’s French classical-style
attire, the front of the petticoat was visible, therefore,
very sumptuous - pleated, embroidered, appliquéd. The
construction of the dress waist was formed by a laced bodice -
a linen corset made of triangles with some fixed rods for the
sake of stiffness. At the front the waist was laced or
buttoned and covered with an adorned breast-plate (Fr.
bavette). This intricate model during the process of its
evolution survived throughout the entire 18th century.
In the last decade of the 18th century, Middle Europe in
respect of its attire became similar to old Greece. The
fascination with ancient examples linked with the discoveries
by archaeologists opened the doors of salons to elegant women
wearing light muslin dresses cut from a piece of single cloth.
Women would to tie a wide ribbon or a band under the raised
line of the waist below the breast. At the end of the century
all the ladies wore such splendidly cut, lightly draped
dresses with trains. They graced their heads with wreaths and
diadems. Their hairdo echoed the hairstyles of ancient
leaders.
The garments were expensive, therefore, they were carefully
handed over from generation to generation. They used to be
sometimes altered due to an enduring beauty of the fabric.
They were also preserved because of the sentiments for a
person who had worn them or some memorable event -
christening, wedding, the first banquet.
Thus, this exhibition is both a reminder of the 18th century
distancing itself from us and the evidence of the skills and
mastery displayed by weavers, dress-makers, tailors,
embroiderers. The Warsaw National Museum presented this
collection of historical attire for the first time in its
history in Warsaw last year.
The restoration of the exhibits included in the collection
took long years to complete. It required knowledge, experience
in sewing and the deftness of fingers demonstrated by old
needle-masters. The garments were restored by Wanda Antos,
Barbara Kowalska, Mirosława
Machulak, Anna Makulec, Marzena Michałowska, Jolanta
Latkowska-Romaniuk, Ewa Soszko, Anna Szczypka, Aleksandra
Wróbel. Wojciech Zasadni designed mannequins, Lidija Oleczek -
old hairstyles. Halina Andrzejak sponsored sewing work of the
team.
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