The Costume
Institute's spring 2016 exhibition explores how fashion designers are
reconciling the handmade and the machine-made in the creation of haute couture
and avant-garde ready-to-wear.
With more than 170 ensembles dating from the early
20th century to the present, the exhibition addresses the founding of the haute
couture in the 19th century, when the sewing machine was invented, and the
emergence of a distinction between the hand (manus) and the machine (machina)
at the onset of mass production. It explores this ongoing dichotomy, in which
hand and machine are presented as discordant tools in the creative process, and
questions the relationship and distinction between haute couture and ready-to-wea
The Robert Lehman Wing galleries, on the Museum's
first floor and ground level, have been transformed into a
building-within-a-building using white scrims. The space houses a series of
case studies in which haute couture and ready-to-wear ensembles are decoded to
reveal their hand/machine DNA.
A 2014 haute couture wedding dress by Karl
Lagerfeld for Chanel with a 20-foot train occupies a central cocoon, with
details of its embroidery projected onto the domed ceiling. The scuba knit
ensemble, one of the inspirations for the exhibition, stands as a superlative
example of the confluence between the handmade and the machine-made–the pattern
on the train was hand-painted with gold metallic pigment, machine-printed with
rhinestones, and hand-embroidered with pearls and gemstones.
http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2016/manus-x-machina
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