SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and
Snap Inc. are now starting an interactive augmented reality installation at the de Young museum that celebrates how technology is transforming the way we experience fashion and culture. It will launch today, at the opening of the Fine Arts Museums major exhibition Fashioning San Francisco: A Century of Style, which spans a century of high fashion and haute couture worn by Bay Area women. It marks the first time Snap's AR Mirrors have been featured in a US museum.
From bohemian styles to elegant evening wear, fashion is an important form of personal expression for San Franciscans, inspired by the citys location on the Pacific Rim and its inclusive mindset. Drawn from the Fine Arts Museums exceptional costume holdings, Fashioning San Francisco will present the work of more than 50 fashion designers, from Balmain to Miyake, Valentino to McQueen, with the majority of ensembles to be on view for the very first time.
Snapchat augmented reality will give visitors the chance to see how three evening ensembles presented in the exhibition look on them. This technology will immerse them in the creative vision of some of the world's most iconic designers, as they virtually try on outfits by the late French designer Yves Saint Laurent, Chinese-American Bay Area-based designer Kaisik Wong, and Italian designer Valentino.
Fashioning San Francisco chronicles the ways in which style in the Bay Area has evolved over generations. Thanks to Snaps augmented reality mirrors our visitors will have the opportunity to visualize themselves as a part of this history and to imagine their role in charting the citys next sartorial chapter, stated Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
This project showcases how Snapchat can support the arts by using augmented reality in innovative, impactful, and stylish ways, said Rajni Jacques, Global Head of Fashion & Beauty at Snap Inc. Our partnership with the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco is a testament to how augmented reality can infiltrate culture, encourage creativity and self expression, and bring historic couture to life like never before.
Snaps AR Mirrors bridge the gap between the digital and physical, bringing together its AR technology stack designed specifically for physical screens to capture real-time images via a camera that projects onto the screen with AR.
Fashioning San Francisco: A Century of Style
Fashioning San Francisco: A Century of Style will examine the role of style as a marker of social identity. The exhibition draws mainly from the significant costume collections of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; including a rich selection of high fashion and haute couture ensembles generously donated by Bay Area women philanthropists.
Fashioning San Francisco situates the Fine Arts Museums remarkable high fashion and haute couture collections within the context of the citys development and the ascension of Bay Area women as civic, social, cultural, and sartorial leaders, states Laura L. Camerlengo, Curator in Charge of Costume and Textile Arts at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. These individuals further contributed to the cultural fiber of their communities by donating their wardrobes to the Fine Art Museums of San Francisco for the preservation and the benefit of future generations. We are delighted to honor and elevate their legacies.
Fashioning San Francisco commences in the early 20th century, a time when San Francisco was regaining its position and redefining itself in the wake of the citys earthquake and fire in 1906. The citys desire to assert its international status in the wake of disaster manifested in the dress codes of its prominent women. Such manifestations included imported French fashions brought into the city through its port, as well as presentations of French couture gowns at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in 1915. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, French peoples formed one of the largest immigrant communities in San Francisco, and upon their arrival, they began importing French goods. The exhibition will feature a number of early French designs including rare Callot Surs and Lucile gowns, which attest to San Franciscos burgeoning affluence and cosmopolitanism.
From here the exhibition continues chronologically to explore how the citys geographic location further contributed to the blossoming of international trade in the city, including the rise of department stores as importers of European haute couture in the mid-20th century. San Francisco boasted a robust economy, fostering legendary department stores such as I. Magnin, City of Paris, The White House, and Lilli Ann. These and others played a critical role in the development of San Franciscan style.
Indeed, the allure of luxury runs deep in San Franciscos style ethos, aligned with the citys active social calendar, itself fueled by the citys vibrant cultural sector. With these events offering fashion and civic leaders opportunities to dress their best, Fashioning San Francisco will feature gowns, cocktail dresses, and evening attire by European couturiers such as Pierre Balmain and Christian Diormany once retailed by the citys department stores and worn to major society events. The exhibition will also dedicate a section to the most indispensable piece in a wardrobe, the little black dress, featuring spectacular interpretations by Christian Dior, Karl Lagerfield, Oscar de la Renta, Valentino, and more.
San Franciscans have a long-standing history of being among the first to embrace the experimental in dress, both supporting and wearing designers with a knack for the radical. Japanese designers such as Rei Kawakubo, Issey Miyake, Junya Watanabe, and Yohji Yamamoto will be featured in a section that explores the avant-garde creatives redefined conventional fashion in the 20th and 21st centuries. Fashioning San Francisco will also explore the work of Western designers who have been inspired by the aesthetics of Asian, African, and other international cultures to address cultural appropriation and its contemporary discourse.
Fashioning San Francisco will honor San Francisco Bay Area women civic leaders, business owners, and public influencers, by presenting the power suits they wore as they helped shape and build the city. Indicative of San Francisco, these suits embody the citys specific climate, terrain, and varied aesthetics, presenting San Francisco as a working city for confident women.
The exhibition will conclude with a selection of shoes from the Fine Arts Museums permanent collection, highlighting a mix of materials and styles that reflect the diverse roles and tastes of the San Franciscans who wore them. From their fine leather craftsmanship to embellishments of bright colors, spangles and shoes in this section of the exhibition will assert footwear are an important accessory in establishing their wearers sense of self.
As traditional studies of fashion history have prioritized designers and narratives from the so-called major fashion cities of Paris, Milan, London, and New York, Fashioning San Francisco challenges the conventional notions of what makes a fashion city.
Fashions on view by:
Pierre Balmain
Frederick Gibson Bayh
Geoffrey Beene
Manolo Blahnik
Blancquaert
Bill Blass
Louise Boulanger
Thea Cadabra-Rooke
Callot Soeurs
Roberto Capucci
Gabrielle Chanel
Comme des Garçons
Sybil Connolly
Jacques Costet
Jean-Charles de Castelbajac
Oscar de la Renta
Herman Delman
Markis Der Balian
Marchesa Olga di Grésy
Christian Dior
Jacques Fath
Gianfranco Ferré
Mariano Fortuny
James Galanos
John Galliano
Valentino Garavani
Jean Paul Gaultier
Madame Alix Grès
Peggy Hoyt
Charles Jourdan
Rei Kawakubo
Christian Lacroix
Julio Laffitte
Karl Lagerfeld
Jeanne Lanvin
Beth Levine
Lucile
Alexander McQueen
Issey Miyake
Kei Ninomiya
On Aura Tout Vu
Edwin Oudshoorn
Jean Patou
Prada
Rodarte
Christopher John Rogers
Ralph Rucci
Yves Saint Laurent
Richard Tam
Vivienne Tam
Emanuel Ungaro
Roger Vivier
Junya Watanabe
Vivienne Westwood
Kaisik Wong
Yohji Yamamoto
Pietro Yantorny
Zhang Hongtu
Catalogue
Fashioning San Francisco: A Century of Style will be accompanied by a 200-page exhibition catalogue, which includes in-depth, scholarly essays that explore San Franciscos position as a port city on the Pacific Rim and the symbiotic relationship between its sartorial and sociopolitical landscapes, with a special focus on womens contributions to civic life and how they have shaped the collection, in addition to a lavish selection of full-color imagery of the Fine Arts Museums holdings.
Caroline and H. McCoy Jones Department of Textile Arts
With holdings that span nearly three millennia and represent cultures from 125 countries, the costume and textile arts collection draws connections across cultures and enriches other areas of the permanent collection. The Caroline and H. McCoy Jones Department of Textile Arts contains more than 22,000 textiles and costumes from around the world. A remarkable range of techniques is represented in the works, which include loom-woven textiles, nonwoven fabrics (such as bark cloth, felt, and knitting), and objects embellished with beading and embroidery. Highlights from the collection include extraordinary Turkmen carpets, rare 12th- through 15th-century Central Asian and North Indian silks, the most important group of Anatolian kilims outside Turkey, European tapestries, exquisite ecclesiastical textiles, and contemporary Bay Area fiber art. The de Young is known for its 20th-century couture, particularly from the postWorld War II era, with outstanding pieces by Gabrielle Chanel, Christian Dior, Madame Grès, and Yves Saint Laurent.
About Snap Inc.
Snap Inc. is a technology company. We believe the camera presents the greatest opportunity to improve the way people live and communicate. We contribute to human progress by empowering people to express themselves, live in the moment, learn about the world, and have fun together.
Fashioning San Francisco: A Century of Style
Curated by Laura L. Camerlengo, Curator in Charge of Costume and Textile Arts at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
January 20th, 2024 - August 11th, 2024