From 7
November 2015 to 20 March 2016
Elisabeth, Countess Greffulhe by Otto circa 1886-1887
- Photo : © Otto / Galliera / Roger-Viollet
This
exhibition focusing on the wardrobe of Élizabeth, Countess Greffulhe, whose
beauty and elegance was one of the main inspirations for Marcel Proust and the
fashion designers of her time.
For the
first time ever, the Palais Galliera is displaying the fabulous wardrobe of
Countess Greffulhe, née Élisabeth de Caraman-Chimay (1860-1952). She was the
cousin of French dandy and poet Robert de Montesquiou and was immortalised for
posterity by Marcel Proust as the Duchess of Guermantes in the famous novel In
Search of Lost Time. Proust wrote to Montesquiou : ‘There is
no single part of her to be found in any other woman, or anywhere else for that
matter. The entire mystery of her beauty is in the glow, above all in the
enigma of her eyes. I have never seen a woman as beautiful as she.’
The Divine
Comtesse was born at the end of the Second Empire, saw two Republics
and two world wars. She lived through the Belle Époque and the Roaring
Twenties, and was the acknowledged leader of Paris Society (le Tout-Paris)
for half a century. She became particularly influential after her marriage
to the extremely wealthy Count Henry Greffulhe. The most beautiful woman in
Paris – to behold and to hear speak – held a salon in her Paris townhouse in
the Rue d’Astorg, and also received guests at the Château de Bois-Boudran and
her villa in Dieppe. She was an early adept of ‘fundraising’. As founding
president of the Société des Grandes Auditions Musicales, she turned
charity work into public relations. With tremendous practical acumen, she
raised funds and produced and promoted operas and shows, which included
Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde and Twilight of the Gods,
Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, and Isadora Duncan. In addition to this, she was a
political animal – a fierce supporter, for example, of Captain Dreyfus, Leon
Blum, and the Popular Front’. She was also a passionate sponsor of science: she
helped Marie Curie to finance the Institute of Radium, and Edouard Branly
pursue his research into wireless telegraphy.
Countess
Greffulhe was the epitome of elegance, with glorious outfits to match. Her
public appearances were highly theatrical, with a sense of their being rare,
fleeting and incomparably fascinating, in a cloud of tulle, gauze, chiffon and
feathers, or in her kimono jackets, her velvet coats, with her oriental
patterns, her shades of gold and silver, pink and green. The outfits were
carefully chosen to emphasise her slim waist and her slender figure.
On display
at the Palais Galliera there are some fifty models bearing the labels of grands
couturiers such as Worth, Fortuny, Babani, and Lanvin. There are coats, indoor
clothes, day dresses, evening dresses, and also accessories, portraits,
photographs and films. Every item is an invitation to go ‘in search of lost
fashion’ and to become acquainted with this great figure of Paris Society,
whose image was inescapably bound up with her wardrobe.
* Fashion
Regained. The treasured dresses of Élisabeth, Countess Greffulhe
http://www.palaisgalliera.paris.fr/en/exhibitions/la-mode-retrouvee
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