Christian Louboutin. "Printz,"
Spring/Summer 2013. Courtesy of Christian Louboutin. Photograph: Jay Zukerkorn
September 10, 2014–February 15, 2015
Robert E. Blum Gallery, 1st Floor
Killer Heels explores fashion’s
most provocative accessory. From the high platform chopines of
sixteenth-century Italy to the glamorous stilettos on today’s runways and red
carpets, the exhibition looks at the high-heeled shoe’s rich and varied history
and its enduring place in our popular imagination.
As fashion statement, fetish object, instrument of power,
and outlet of artistic expression for both the designer and the wearer,
throughout the ages the high-heeled shoe has gone through many shifts in style
and symbolism. Deadly sharp stilettos, architecturally inspired wedges and
platforms, and a number of artfully crafted shoes that defy categorization are
featured among the more than 160 historical and contemporary heels on loan from
designers, from the renowned Brooklyn Museum costume collection housed at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, and from the Bata Shoe Museum. Designers and design houses
represented in Killer Heels
include Manolo Blahnik, Chanel, Salvatore Ferragamo, Zaha Hadid X United Nude,
Iris van Herpen X United Nude, Christian Louboutin, Alexander McQueen, André
Perugia, Prada, Elsa Schiaparelli, Noritaka Tatehana, Vivienne Westwood, and
Pietro Yantorny.
Presented alongside the objects in the exhibition are six
specially commissioned short films inspired by high heels. The filmmakers are
Ghada Amer and Reza Farkhondeh, Zach Gold, Steven Klein, Nick Knight, Marilyn
Minter, and Rashaad Newsome.
Killer Heels: The Art of the High-Heeled Shoe is organized by Lisa Small, Curator of Exhibitions,
Brooklyn Museum. A fully illustrated catalogue accompanies the exhibition.
http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/heels/
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