Bangkok Post

Exhibition explores gender, fashion

- TRACEE M. HERBAUGH

When actor Billy Porter unveiled his combinatio­n tuxedo-ball gown at the Oscars last month, it got people talking.

Porter, the black and gay breakout star of the series Pose, had bucked traditiona­l Academy Award attire — fancy frocks for the ladies and basic tuxedos for men.

A photo of Porter’s eye-catching Oscar garb is included in a new exhibit at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts that opens to the public last week. The exhibit titled “Gender Bending Fashion” examines moments in history when clothing transcende­d and muddled our understand­ing of gender.

The show was inspired, in part, by what’s happening right now in fashion, said Michelle Finamore, a fashion historian and curator.

“The lines are getting more and more blurred,” she said.

“Gender Bending Fashion” is the first large-scale exhibit of its kind to be hosted by a major museum. It is comprised of mixed-media: paintings, record covers and photograph­s. But a highlight for viewers will surely be the 70 gender-bending ensembles from big-name designers, such as Rei Kawakubo, of Comme des Garcons, and Walter Van Beirendonc­k, a member of the influentia­l avant-garde group Antwerp Six.

One notable inclusion is the tuxedo that actress Marlene Dietrich wore in the 1930 film Morocco.

Dietrich has long been hailed as a hero for gender fluidity. It wasn’t uncommon for her to wear top hats, shirts with French cuffs and cuff links, and pantsuits tailored for men.

“She was both sides of the binary in that she was either extremely feminine or extremely masculine,” Finamore said.

The exhibit references the 1920s, a time when women first cut their hair short. Then it progresses to the 1960s and The Peacock Revolution, when menswear shifted from plain and simple to flamboyant, colourful and tailored to the body. The 60s is also when unisex attire became mainstream. And present day is thought to be the height of gender fluidity in fashion.

Each of these moments represent a cultural shift within society, said Jo Paloetti, author of the books Sex And Unisex: Fashion, Feminism, And The Sexual Revolution and Pink And Blue: Telling The Boys From The Girls In America.

In the 1920s, women secured the right to vote and started working outside the home for the first time. The 1960s brought the sexual revolution, gay rights and second-wave feminism — people pushing back against traditiona­l roles.

Today, as the world questions the very relevance of gender definition­s, cultural questions are taking visual form in fashion, Paloetti said.

“We are asking what it means to be man or woman,” she said. “Are these terms just a proxy for stereotype­s?”

The show is on display until Aug 25.

 ??  ?? Some outfits featured in the ‘Gender Bending Fashion’ exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachuse­tts.
Some outfits featured in the ‘Gender Bending Fashion’ exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachuse­tts.
 ??  ?? US actor and singer Billy Porter arrives for the 91st Annual Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre, in Hollywood, California, on Feb 24.
US actor and singer Billy Porter arrives for the 91st Annual Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre, in Hollywood, California, on Feb 24.
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