NEW YORK, NY.- The spring 2012 exhibition organized by The Costume Institute of
The Metropolitan Museum of Art is Schiaparelli and Prada: Impossible Conversations. The exhibition, on view from May 10 through August 19, 2012 (preceded on May 7 by The Costume Institute Gala Benefit), explores the striking affinities between these two Italian designers from different eras. Inspired by Miguel Covarrubiass satirical Impossible Interviews for Vanity Fair in the 1930s, curators Harold Koda and Andrew Bolton orchestrate conversations between these iconic women to suggest new readings of the designers most innovative work.
Given the role Surrealism and other art movements play in the designs of both Schiaparelli and Prada, it seems only fitting that their inventive creations be explored here at the Met, said Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Schiaparellis collaborations with Dalí and Cocteau as well as Pradas Fondazione Prada push art and fashion ever closer, in a direct, synergistic, and culturally redefining relationship.
To celebrate the opening of the exhibition, the Museum's Costume Institute Benefit takes place on Monday, May 7, 2012. For the first time in its history, red carpet arrivals will be live streamed from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. on metmuseum.org, amazon.com/fashion, and vogue.com. The evenings Honorary Chair is Jeff Bezos, Founder and CEO of Amazon.com. Co-Chairs are actress Carey Mulligan, designer Miuccia Prada, and Anna Wintour, Editor-in-Chief of Vogue. This fundraising event is The Costume Institutes main source of annual funding for exhibitions, acquisitions, and capital improvements.
The exhibition is organized by Harold Koda, Curator in Charge, and Andrew Bolton, Curator, both of the Mets Costume Institute. Film director, screenwriter, and producer Baz Luhrmann is the exhibitions creative consultant, and has created a series of filmed elements for the exhibition. The production design for the films is by Luhrmann's longtime collaborator, Catherine Martin. The exhibition design is realized by Nathan Crowley, who serves as production designer (he was creative consultant for the Mets exhibitions Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy and American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity). All mannequin head treatments and masks are designed by Guido Palau.
The Exhibition
In the galleries, iconic ensembles by Schiaparelli and Prada are presented alongside short videos of simulated conversations between the two designers directed by Luhrmann, focusing on how the women explore similar themes in their work through very different approaches.
Juxtaposing the work of Elsa Schiaparelli and Miuccia Prada allows us to explore how the past enlightens the present and how the present enlivens the past, said Koda.
The connection of the historic to the modern highlights the affinities as well as the variances between two women who constantly subverted contemporary notions of taste, beauty, and glamour, added Bolton.
The exhibition, in the Metropolitan Museums first-floor special exhibition galleries, features approximately 100 designs and 40 accessories by Elsa Schiaparelli (18901973) from the late 1920s to the early 1950s, and by Miuccia Prada from the late 1980s to the present, drawn from The Costume Institutes collection and the Prada Archive, as well as other institutions and private collections. Eight short videos created by Luhrmann, in which Prada talks with Schiaparelli, who is played by actress Judy Davis, animate the entry gallery and the seven themed sections of the exhibition and provide the thread that connects the objects. In the films, Schiap and Prada are seated at a dining table in dialogue that has been created using paraphrased excerpts from Schiaparellis autobiography, Shocking Life, and Pradas filmed remarks. Visitors will have the impression of eavesdropping on a fantastical meeting of two great fashion minds.
The section of the exhibition entitled Waist Up/Waist Down looks at Schiaparellis use of decorative detailing as a response to restaurant dressing in the heyday of 1930s café society, while showing Pradas below-the-waist focus as a symbolic expression of modernity and femininity. An accessories subsection of this gallery called Neck Up/Knees Down showcases Schiaparellis hats and Pradas footwear. Ugly Chic reveals how both women subvert ideals of beauty and glamour by playing with good and bad taste through color, prints, and textiles.
Hard Chic explores the influence of uniforms and menswear to promote a minimal aesthetic that is intended to both deny and enhance femininity. Naïf Chic focuses on Schiaparelli and Pradas adoption of a girlish sensibility to subvert expectations of age-appropriate dressing. Classical Body explores the designers engagement with antiquity through the gaze of the late-18th and early-19th centuries. Exotic Body touches on the influence of Eastern cultures through fabrics such as lamé, and silhouettes such as saris and sarongs.
Surreal Body, in the final gallery, illustrates how both women affect contemporary images of the female body through Surrealistic practices such as displacement, playing with scale, and blurring the boundaries between reality and illusion, natural and artificial.
Schiaparelli, who worked in Paris from the 1920s until her house closed in 1954, was associated closely with the Surrealist movement and created such iconic pieces as the tear dress, the shoe hat, and the bug necklace. Prada, who holds a degree in political science, took over her familys Milan-based business in 1978, and focuses on fashion that reflects the eclectic nature of Postmodernism.