Human Ecology centennial celebration includes four exhibits featuring clothing and art
By Susan S. Lang
ITHACA, N.Y. -- Four clothing, textile and art exhibits are coinciding with the centennial celebration for Cornell University's College of Human Ecology this coming weekend, March 30-31.
One exhibit, which focuses on fashions of the 20th century and their interactions with art, is paired with a show of contemporary works of art in which clothing and dress are the subject matter; both are in the university's Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art. The third exhibit, featuring children's clothing, is in the Cornell Costume and Textile Collection Gallery (on the third floor of Martha Van Rensselaer Hall). All three exhibits coincide with the centennial celebration this week but will continue until June 17.
"Common Threads: Dress, Identity and Art in the Twentieth Century" is curated by Charlotte Jirousek, associate professor of textiles and apparel and the curator of the Cornell Costume and Textile Collection. "This show focuses on how dress has reflected social and cultural changes over the course of the past century and how fashion has been influenced by the world of art," says Jirousek.
She has included selections from the collections of the Johnson Art Museum to show how changes in fashion and art interacted and reflected transformations in gender roles and social identity throughout the 20th century. Jirousek will give a gallery talk on the exhibit from 3 to 4 p.m. Saturday, March 31, at the Johnson Museum.
The second exhibition, "Uncommon Threads: Contemporary Artists and Clothing," curated by Sean Ulmer, the Johnson Museum of Art's curator for paintings and sculpture, is a by-invitation exhibition of contemporary artists who incorporate clothing in their conception and/or construction of works of art. "Clothing and its reference to the absent body have been a topic of increasing artistic interest over the last quarter century," says Ulmer. "In the past decade, however, it has seen new and innovative dimensions. This exhibition will present approximately 40 objects dating from the 1990s and will give a general overview of the ideas that surfaced during this decade." Ulmer will give a gallery talk on the exhibit from 4 to 5 p.m. Saturday, March 31, at the Johnson Museum. A reception for both Johnson Museum exhibits is at 5 p.m. Both talks and the reception are open to the public.
The third exhibition is "Little Threads: Children's Costume in the Cornell Costume and Textile Collection." This exhibition, which is located at the east end of the third floor of MVR Hall, traces the relationship of children's dress to our culture's expectations for children's lives, from infancy through the various passages and activities of childhood. The exhibition, conceived and designed by Susan Greene, a visiting fellow in the Department of Textiles and Apparel, was a learning opportunity for students in the course Human Development 241, History of Childhood, who participated in an interdepartmental research project based on, and incorporated into, the exhibition.
A fourth exhibit, of photography, is "American Dresses 1780-1900: Identification and Significance of 148 Extant Dresses." The photographs are on display in 114 MVR Hall at the east end of the old wing of the building.
Related World Wide Web sites: The following sites provide additional information on this news release. Some might not be part of the Cornell University community, and Cornell has no control over their content or availability.
o Human Ecology: http://www.human.cornell.edu
o Story about the centennial:
http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/Oct00/HE.centennial.ssl.html
o For historical home economics photos:
http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/eDB-HEphotos/
oHerbert F. Johnson Museum of Art
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