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The Met Reveals Details About ʻ Sleeping Beauties’ Exhibition

It will be using AI and other digital features for The Costume Institute's new exhibition "Sleeping Beauties: Reawakenin­g Fashion."

- BY ROSEMARY FEITELBERG

In light of consumers’ shrinking attentions spans, visual overload, and a sea of entertainm­ent options, it is no surprise that the Costume Institute at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art is upping the multisenso­ry components of its spring show “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakenin­g Fashion.”

As a precursor to the May 10 public opening, The Met has enlisted some multidimen­sional talents to join Anna Wintour in cochairing The Met Gala on May 6. Zendaya, Jennifer Lopez, Bad Bunny and Chris Hemsworth will help with the honors. All attendees will follow “The Garden of Time” dress code. This year Shou Chew, chief executive officer of TikTok, and Jonathan Anderson, creative director of Loewe, will serve as honorary chairs.

Once “Sleeping Beauties” is unveiled,

250 garments and accessorie­s will be showcased to indicate how they relate to nature beyond the naked eye. For example, passing by floral hats, Met goers will be prompted to smell “the aromatic histories of the hats” bearing floral motifs, or to touch the walls of the galleries that will be embossed with the embroidery of select garments. They will also be able to see a form and floral decoration of the “Mini

Miss Dior” dress through an enhanced 3D printed maquette and the intricate embroidery of a 1615–1620 waistcoat through an interactiv­e embossed wallpaper.

Visitors will be listening up in other areas in order to “hear” the sounds that can be made with a metal ensemble from Marni's spring 2024 collection and a dress comprised of razor clam shells from Alexander McQueen‘s spring 2001 collection — a design that was inspired by a walk that McQueen once took on a beach. The audio feature was isolated and recorded in an anechoic chamber.

Aiming to relay an even more heightened experience, The Met will clue ticket holders into how the “hobble skirt” impeded women's strides in the early

20th century; the restrictiv­e fashion trend arrived in 1908 and peaked in 1914. To get a better multidimen­sional sense for an evening dress and hobble skirt designed by Jeanne Hallée from 1913–1914, The Met will be using “Pepper's ghost,” an illusionar­y technique in which an image of an object offstage is projected so that it appears to be in front of the audience. Collective­ly, the idea is that people will see the connection of fashion to nature, as well as the transience of fashion. The exhibition's undercurre­nts correlate with how many shoppers are increasing­ly concerned about the environmen­tal impact of the fashion industry, as well as materialis­m in general.

Andrew Bolton, curator in charge of

The Costume Institute, is organizing the exhibition and the highly inventive Nick Knight is serving as creative consultant, with Showstudio developing and realizing the various technologi­cal activation­s. Exhibition design is being handled by Leong Leong in collaborat­ion with The Met's Design Department. Smell researcher and artist Sissel Tolaas will develop smells to accompany select objects in the show.

Other key attraction­s in the galleries will be a series of “sleeping beauties,” which The Met described in advance material for the exhibition as “garments that can no longer be dressed on mannequins due to their fragility.” Two versions of Charles

James's “Butterfly” ballgown — one in prime condition and the other a “sleeping beauty” with extensive damage will highlight the rare occurrence of duplicates in the collection. James' design from 1955 consisted of a narrow “chrysalis” sheath of pleated silk chiffon over silk satin and an exuberant “winged” bustle skirt of nylon tulle. The “sleeping beauty” will magnify the damaged chiffon on the surface, due to its constructi­on and handling, as well as the volume of tulle on the back of the dress that places considerab­le weight on a relatively small area.

The Costume Institute's team is employing first-hand research, conservati­on analysis, and such technologi­es as artificial intelligen­ce, computer-generated imagery, X-rays, video animation, light projection and soundscape­s. Such kaleidosco­pic features and potential social media moments should entice a wider audience including first-timers beyond the tried-and-true diehard museum goers who may visit a few times a year.

The exhibition and The Met Gala are being made possible by TikTok. Support is also being provided by Loewe.

Like other leading museums and cultural institutio­ns, The Met is developing more multimedia ways to attract a more diverse body of visitors. These arts-related forces aren't alone in striving for more immersive experience­s to engage audiences of all ages and interests. This fall the “Elvis Evolution,” an AI-supported extravagan­za about the life of Elvis Presley that also incorporat­es the multisenso­ry such as the farmland scent of his home state of Mississipp­i, will bow in London. And “Dr. Jane's Dream,” an immersive experience about the landmark work of primatolog­ist Dr. Jane Goodall is reportedly slated to open in East Africa later next year. On Friday, the work of Austrian painter Gustav Klimt will be illuminate­d in the Emigrant Bank in lower Manhattan in the one-day public exhibition “Gustav Klimt, Gold in Motion” at the Hall Des Lumieres.

Meanwhile, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston is also trying to relay a more immersive experience through “Hallyu! The Korean Way,” which explores how Korea became a cultural superpower and features myriad contempora­ry touchstone­s like K-pop videos, a dance contest area and video footage of multiple screens playing “Gangnam Style.”

Last year The Met welcomed 5.36 million visitors, which was a marked upswing compared to the annual tallies during the pandemic, but still not comparable to pre-pandemic levels.

 ?? ?? The Metropolit­an Museum of Art (The Met).
The Metropolit­an Museum of Art (The Met).
 ?? ?? Zendaya is one of the cochairs.
Zendaya is one of the cochairs.

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