From the runways to the
streets, designers and wearers today are upending traditional ideas about men’s
and women’s clothing. But those trends in American and European fashion are not
new. This exhibition looks across a century of haute couture and ready-to-wear
fashion that has challenged rigid, binary definitions of dress. It features
more than 60 boundary-pushing designs, presenting the work of groundbreaking
contemporary designers—including Rad Hourani, Jean Paul Gaultier, Alessandro
Michele for Gucci, Palomo, and Rei Kawakubo—in the context of historical trends
like the garçonne look of the 1920s and the peacock revolution of the 1960s.
“Gender Bending Fashion”
examines a rich history of fashion disrupting, blurring, and redefining
conventions and expectations around the relationship between gender and dress.
At the same time, the garments on view can speak more broadly to societal
shifts across the past century—including changing gender roles, increasing
visibility of LGBTQIA+ communities, and the rise of social media as a powerful
tool for self-expression. Throughout the exhibition, individual narratives
emerge, touching on issues of gender identity and expression, sexuality, race,
class, pop culture, activism, social justice, and more. “Gender Bending
Fashion” features a digital album in two formats—a large-scale video and an
interactive touchscreen—that highlights ten individuals from the Boston area
whose perspectives reflect and expand on many of these themes.
Featuring pieces worn by
actors, musicians, and influencers, including Marlene Dietrich, David Bowie,
Jimi Hendrix, and Young Thug, the multimedia presentation also incorporates
paintings, photographs, music, and video. The works in the exhibition are drawn
from the MFA’s collection as well as loans from museums, archives, private
collections, and fashion houses.
https://www.mfa.org/exhibitions/gender-bending-fashion
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