Arab Times

Exhibition traces history of couture in 100 dresses

‘Fashion has not really changed’

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PARIS, Feb 28, (AFP): From Worth and Balenciaga to Yves Saint Laurent, Christian Dior and John Galliano, a landmark exhibition due to open in Paris on Saturday traces the history of haute couture through some of the most exquisite dresses ever made.

The exhibition for the first time gathers more than 100 iconic creations from 150 years of fashion accompanie­d by archive photograph­s and drawings.

The story begins with an 1895 highnecked tea dress in green velvet and silk by the man considered the father of haute couture, Briton Charles Frederick Worth.

Worth, from Lincolnshi­re in eastern England, opened for business in central Paris in 1858 at 7, Rue de la Paix; others followed and by 1911 the Paris Haute Couture Associatio­n had been formed.

At an exhibition of decorative arts held in the French capital in 1925, 75 couture houses were represente­d. Contractio­n Highlights from the 1920s and 1930s include Jeanne Lanvin’s 1929 black taffeta “Bel Oiseau” (Beautiful bird) dress and a 1932 ivory silk robe by Madeleine Vionnet so timeless it could have been made yesterday.

By 1930, economic circumstan­ces forced a contractio­n with collection­s slimmed down from a staggering 400 designs to 100, according to exhibition curator Olivier Saillard, director of Paris’s Galliera fashion museum.

“They (the fashion houses) had already seen the disappeara­nce — as a result of the First World War — of their aristocrat­ic customers who used to come to Paris a lot,” he said.

Neverthele­ss, in 1935, Chanel alone was employing 4,000 workers to make 28,000 pieces a year.

World War II also hit the industry and in 1945 the number of designs per collection was again reduced to 75.

In 1947, Christian Dior opened his own couture house, followed in 1952 by Hubert de Givenchy and Pierre Cardin. By 1953, there were some 59 couture houses.

For Saillard, the 1930s were the stylistic “golden age” of haute couture for which Paris is famed, along with the 1950s.

Among the creations representi­ng this charmed fashion decade is “Palmyre,” a strapless Christian Dior embroidere­d evening dress.

“All designers go back to the 1950s, fashion has not really changed,” said Saillard.

In 1961, Yves Saint Laurent founded his own fashion house and presented his first collection the following year.

By 1973, however, the number of houses was down to 25, employing 3,120 people, and by 1990 that figure was a mere 928.

Today around 20 houses are involved in haute couture, organising shows twice yearly in January and July, with about a dozen of those belonging to the haute couture associatio­n and able to meet its strict criteria such as the amount of work done in house by hand.

The entire industry is based on an estimated several hundred customers worldwide, although designers report that numbers are rising due to new customers from newly-rich parts of the world such as China, Russia and Brazil.

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