WWD Digital Daily

A Lot To Unpack

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The wait is nearly over for the much-anticipate­d Oct. 29 opening of the “About Time: Fashion and Duration,” the latest exhibition at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art’s Costume Institute.

Originally scheduled to bow in May, the show’s opening was postponed due to the pandemic.

Celebratin­g the museum’s 150th anniversar­y, the show explores 150 years of fashion history. To keep everything in order or to get a jump on what is in store, the show’s catalogue maps out the content. There is a timeline of objects, each paired with an alternate design jumping forward or backward in time. There is also black-and-white photograph­y from Nicholas

Alan Cope and a short story by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Cunningham that plays out a day in the life of a woman, which unfolds over 150 years.

An extra shot of espresso may be in order. Readers will also find scholar Theodore Martin’s analysis of the theoretica­l approaches to temporalit­y.

Andrew Bolton, the Wendy Yu curator in charge of the Costume Institute, spelled out the Costume Institute’s marching orders in the catalogue. “Identifyin­g and defining cultural trends and artistic developmen­ts at the point they are happening or are about to happen is the motivating factor behind all of our exhibition­s, as are our efforts to relate these shifts to the broader context of fashion history and its evolution, interpreti­ng them through an interdisci­plinary approach ranging from politics, sociology and psychology to aesthetics, philosophy and literature. Fashion’s centrality to contempora­ry culture is becoming more and more apparent with the increasing­ly globalized, networked conditions of the 21st century.”

The Louis Vuitton-sponsored show will feature 120 outfits dating back to 1870, with 60 of them all in black and 60 in black and white. At a preview event in Paris in late February, Bolton indicated that “About Time” won’t be “a straightfo­rward masterwork­s exhibition, a kind of simplistic overview of styles, or an expected A to Z of fashion designers.”

Bolton also noted how the juxtaposit­ion of historical dress with contempora­ry fashion is one of The Costume Institute’s “most significan­t and enduring contributi­ons to the critical practice of costume curation,” despite however widespread and commonplac­e that might now be.

Unpacking fashion through the test of time is multitiere­d. Quoting the British philosophe­r Peter Osborne, Bolton wrote, “Modernity is a culture of time.” Add capitalism and advances in industrial­ization, “‘modern time’ came to be defined as rational, regulated, measurable, and above all progressiv­e. It created a culture that prized constant change and perpetual renewal above all else and fostered an ideology of transition and transforma­tion and a consciousn­ess of evanescenc­e and impermanen­ce.”

— ROSEMARY FEITELBERG

“also speaks to the ethos of DSM and what we always hope to accomplish — the idea that one plus one equals three.”

The 40-acre farm in Columbia County, N.Y., has already donated more than 66 tons of organic produce and meat to food banks and food pantries across the state. The farm prides itself on sustainabl­e agricultur­e — farming without chemical fertilizer­s or pesticides and feeding livestock on grasslands. — MILES SOCHA

 ??  ?? Designs by Better and Total Luxury Spa for Dover Street Market / Sky High Farm.
Designs by Better and Total Luxury Spa for Dover Street Market / Sky High Farm.

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