With its plush, inviting,
and often-varied texture, velvet offers a sensory experience and brings to mind
notions of wealth, splendor, and indulgence. For hundreds of years, this
opulent textile operated as a status symbol, and today it remains a fabric with
luxurious connotations. This exhibition, featuring 42 velvets from the
permanent collection, examines the various effects of industry on the design
and production of this splendid fabric from the 19th century to the present
day, showcasing the remarkable diversity of modern velvet.
During the Renaissance and
up until the Industrial Revolution, velvet production required a great deal of
time, specialized labor, and a large volume of expensive materials, especially
silk and gold. Industrial innovations in the late 18th and early 19th centuries,
such as the Jacquard loom, allowed for faster production and encouraged the use
of less costly materials, which made velvet available to a wider range of
consumers. Despite this broader accessibility, designers and manufacturers of
velvets sought to maintain the sense of luxury long associated with the
textile.
The works in this
exhibition demonstrate several modern approaches toward the design and
production of velvet. Some of the velvets, including a colorful example
designed by Gertrude Rapp in the mid-19th century, illustrate the way in
which weavers recreated the look and feel of earlier velvets through careful
reproduction of historical processes. Rapp, working in Pennsylvania,
established and managed a small-scale operation that produced silk as well as
hand-woven velvets. Her piece in the exhibition features a lush, black pattern
on a smooth plum ground enlivened through additional brightly colored
patterning threads that create a confetti-like effect. Other designs,
including an early 20th-century panel by Maria Monaci Gallenga, seek to emulate
the appearance of historic velvets. In Gallenga’s design, however, the black
velvet is made of durable cotton and printed in metallic inks, rather than
woven with precious silk and gold threads. While many designers, weavers, and
manufacturers, including Gallenga, explicitly borrowed from historical motifs
and techniques, they also sought to embrace the potential of the new in terms
of materials, design, and production methods. Swedish designer Hans Krondahl’s
1965 Kyoto furnishing fabric, with a brightly colored, bold geometric pattern
screen-printed onto cotton velvet, firmly grounds itself in 20th-century
design.
As these examples attest,
despite—and sometimes due to—industrial innovations, velvet continues to
inspire designers and offer up its riches to the senses.
http://www.artic.edu/exhibition/modern-velvet-sense-luxury-age-industry
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