Greetings,
How on Earth have I missed hearing about this - and thank heavens for the bus advertisement that I saw, whilst stuck in weird traffic this morning, on the way into work.
Pulp Fashion opened about two weeks ago at the Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco and is running through June 5. The name of the exhibit also describes the works themselves. Period costumes. Made from paper. Seriously, paper.
"Belgian artist Isabelle de Borchgrave is a painter by training, but
textile and costume are her muses. Working in collaboration with
leading costume historians and young fashion designers, de Borchgrave crafts
a world of splendor from the simplest rag paper. Painting and manipulating
the paper, she forms trompe l’oeil masterpieces of elaborate dresses inspired
by rich depictions in early European painting or by iconic costumes
in museum collections around the world."
"Eleonora di Toledo with Her Son Giovanni " (ca. 1545) by Agnolo Bronzino, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florance |
Elizabeth I court dress (above), 2001, inspired by a ca. 1599 portrait by the studio of Nicholas Hilliard at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire. (Photo: Andreas von Einsiedel) |
"Elizabeth I", 1599-1600, Hardwick Hall portrait, by Nicolas Hilliard. |
(Detail of the dress above) |
"Pulp Fashion draws on several themes and presents quintessential examples in
the history of costume—from Renaissance finery of the Medici family and gowns
worn by Elizabeth I and Marie-Antoinette to the creations of the grand
couturiers Frederick Worth, Paul Poiret, Christian Dior, and Coco Chanel.
Special attention is given to the creations and studio of Mariano
Fortuny, the eccentric early-20th-century artist who is both
a major source of inspiration to de Borchgrave and a kindred spirit."
Marie de’ Medici (detail), 2006, inspired by a 1595 portrait by Pietro Facchetti in the collection of the Palazzo Lancellotti, Rome. (Photo: Andreas von Einsiedel) |
Click HERE for ticket information.
Cheers,
Scot
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