Daily Fashion Report Emailed Newsletter
If you would like to receive our updates please enter your email address, choose a content format and click "Join."
HTML Text
Masthead & site info
Contact us


TABLE OF CONTENTS

DFR: Daily Fashion Report is THE FIRST FASHION BLOG to be published on the Internet -- click below links to access over 1000 articles archived on a monthly basis going back SIX YEARS:

February 2002 March 2002 April 2002 May 2002 June 2002 July 2002 August 2002 September 2002 October 2002 November 2002 December 2002 January 2003 February 2003 March 2003 April 2003 May 2003 June 2003 July 2003 August 2003 September 2003 October 2003 November 2003 December 2003 January 2004 February 2004 March 2004 April 2004 May 2004 June 2004 July 2004 August 2004 September 2004 October 2004 November 2004 December 2004 January 2005 February 2005 March 2005 April 2005 May 2005 June 2005 July 2005 August 2005 September 2005 October 2005 November 2005 December 2005 January 2006 February 2006 March 2006 April 2006 May 2006 June 2006 July 2006 August 2006 September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006 January 2007 February 2007 March 2007 April 2007 May 2007 June 2007 July 2007 August 2007 September 2007 October 2007 November 2007 December 2007 January 2008 February 2008 March 2008 April 2008 May 2008 June 2008 July 2008

SPONSORED LINKS:

Designer Shoes

koodos.com

Designer Handbags
koodos.com

Designer Jewellery
astleyclarke.com

Jewellery
astleyclark.com

Shirts
van-huesen.com

Formal shirts
savilerowco.com

Jackets
mankind.co.uk

Womans fashion
elvi.co.uk






PAST FEATURES:
Favorite recent & past reports, articles & reviews:

Better Bets Column 4#


Better Bets Column 3#


Costume Exhibition Opening

2008 Oscars: The Final Word


Fashion Intelligence #3: Fashionless Oscars?

Fashion Intelligence #2: Review of "The Diana Chronicles"

Fashion Intelligence #1: Introduction of New Column"

2007 Oscars: The Final Word
March of the Innocents
Volunteering for 7thonSixth
Review of 'The Devil Wears Prada'
The 2006 CFDA Awards: Celebrity Report by Diane Clehane
The 2006 Oscars: The Final Word by Diane Clehane
American Master's of Interview with Iris Barrel Apfel
Feature: Hawaiian Vintage Shirts
Interview: Ty Yorio of Citadel Security
Fashion, Sex & Lesbianism
Book reviews: gross on lauren
Other voices: get invited to shows
Roundtable: 3 black journalists
Roundtable: 3 top fashion models
Interview: industry legend paul cavaco
Profile: photographer dan lecca
Survey: ny restaurants for fashionistas
Editorial cartoons: "circus maximus"
Photo/glamour libraries
Feature Report Archives



PAST VIDEO REPORTS:

american master of fashion series: interview with ny fashion designer ralph rucci 56k & isdn

american master of fashion series: interview with publisher of fashion calendar ruth finley 56k

american master of fashion series: interview with new york times photographer bill cunningham click here

american master of fashion series: interview with style icon elsa klensch 56k-100k

american master of fashion series: interview with ceo of burberry rose marie bravo conducted by Grace Mirabella 56k-100k

american master of fashion series: interview with photographer arthur elgort conducted by Grace Mirabella 56k

the betsey johnson/playboy bunny runway show 56k isdn Broadband


OTHER SITES:

The Good:

unvogue.com glossy fashion ezine

fashionableliferadio.com fashion radio
prcouture.com thinking pr
Myfashionlife.com hip fashion blog
Style.com vogue & 'w' online
Zoozoom.com a great fashion e-zine
Mediabistro.com for the media pro
Annabayle.com supermodel's blog
Hintmag.com popular fashion ezine
Nogoodforme.filmstills.org daily blog
Fashion.net long running portal
Dailycandy.com a daily heads-up on hip
Coutorture.com online fashion community
Fashionclick.com a great spanish e-zine
Fashionlines.com la fashion site
Thread.com a new zealand e-zine
Gawker.com manhattan weblog magazine
Fashionwiredaily daily fashion reports

The Bad:

fashionweekdaily.com running amuck

& The Ugly:

Lucire.com so awful it's not to be missed!






Google
 
Web lookonline.com
Wednesday, May 28, 2008

"Arbiters of Style"


From Left: Garbrielle 'Coco' Chanel, Mme Gres & Diane von Furstenberg
(All Photos: Randy Brooke)


Ah….style! It’s something that (in certain circles) is highly sought after, elusive, undeniably hard to define and harder still to possess. To many an ‘expert’s’ way of thinking, it’s something you either have, or you don’t. Style is a favored, almost magical word within the fashion world, where it’s often bantered around, used and abused. To wit, there is a fashion magazine named ‘InStyle’, there’s a highly influential website, Style.com, The New York Times has not one but two ‘Style’ sections (one on Thursday and the other on Sunday), and the word ‘style’ is routinely used in fashion advertisements and in fashion magazines, where it’s emblazoned on covers and used within editorial pages.

In fact, “The Secrets of Style” screams out in large royal blue letters on Harper’s Bazaar’s June cover (which features Nicole Ritchie as its ‘stylish’ cover girl) and in the last paragraph of her Editor’s Letter this month, Glenda Bailey observes that “true style is never about the pieces you buy each season: it’s about the pieces you wear every season.” Certainly, if you use this definition as the barometer of what constitutes true style, and see it as the necessary ingredient for being a ‘style arbiter’ (which the Museum at FIT defines as a “tastemaker, whether publicly anointed or self proclaimed, who has the authority to judge and dictate what is fashionable”), there is almost no woman who so epitomizes the idea of a style arbiter as the late rule breaking Diana Vreeland.

So it shouldn’t be surprising that two of Diana Vreeland’s outfits greet you as you enter the Museum of FIT’s galleries, which house their brand new exhibit, “Arbiters of Style: Women at the Forefront of Fashion” (For the record, one is a printed and heavily bejeweled Oscar de la Renta caftan and the other, an acid green Mila Schon skirt suit both of which were gifts to the Museum at FIT from DV and illustrate two distinctly different sides of the style icon).


Miuccia Prada's ‘Fairy’ printed silk pajamas

The exhibit’s organizers, Molly Sorkin and Colleen Hill, along with Fred Dennis, Clare Sauro, Harumi Hotta, Lyn Weidner and Chief Curator, Dr. Valerie Steele were on hand for last Wednesday’s morning press preview. Ms. Sorkin and Ms. Hill admitted that when they began assembling the exhibit, they were struck by the way in which everything was “interconnected” (meaning, women designers wore other women designers’ designs, they were inspired by their clients, etc.) and the effects of globalization. They felt strongly about starting off with Diana Vreeland because she was such an “influential woman in fashion” and similarly, they hailed Miuccia Prada as the “quintessential woman designer of today” which is presumably why they ended with Miuccia’s signature ‘Fairy’ printed silk pajamas from spring 2008.


Designs by Andre Courreges & Marc Bohen for Christian Dior

The exhibit, comprised of approximately 70 looks (clothing and accessories) dating from the 18th century up to the present (there are several outfits from fall 2008) has the distinction of being the first chronological survey focusing on female designers (Coco Chanel, Donna Karan, Vivienne Westwood, fashionable socialites (Isabel Eberstadt, Jane Holzer, models (Marina Schiano, Penelope Tree), fashion journalists and photographers (Diana Vreeland, Despina Messinesi, Louise Dahl- Wolfe), 20th century female executives (Rose Marie Bravo), and clientele who have “shaped fashion’s course for more than 250 years”. The works of only a handful of male designers (Givenchy, Oscar de la Renta, Halston, Yves St. Laurent, Courreges, Geoffrey Beene, Emilio Pucci) were included only as a way to view their “important clients and muses”. And so, as you walk through the rooms, you will see a Halston jumpsuit ‘worn’ by Lauren Bacall, a dramatic black Givenchy gown with a ‘frontless’ coat and Courreges skirt suit (from his first collection) ‘worn’ by Isabel Eberstadt, an Yves St. Laurent Rive Gauche ‘power suit’ ‘worn’ by Rose Marie Bravo, a Christian Dior dress and an Emilio Pucci ensemble ‘worn’ by Jane Holzer, etc.).


Collections of Lyn Devon & Ann Demeulemeester

The designs were selected by virtue of their importance, interest, and “significance” and include an interesting mix of names from up and coming talent (like Lyn Devon and the designing duo behind the label Rodarte), avante-garde legends (Ann Demeulemeester, Rei Kawakubo, Vivienne Westwood), American ‘royalty’ both past and present (Claire McCardell, Bonnie Cashin, Donna Karan, Carolyne Roehm, Diane Von Furstenberg, Carolina Herrera, Vera Wang), and of course, some of the most hallowed labels in fashion history (exemplified by Gabrielle ‘Coco’ Chanel, Mme. Gres, Elsa Schiaparelli). The one thing that struck me as I walked through the exhibit, was the timelessness and modernity of great design. Donna Karan’s draped black jersey dress from 1987 could have easily stepped off this season’s runway, and the same can be said of dozens of other items on view, including the Chanel suit and Madame Gres evening ensemble, which made their ‘debuts’ many decades before the Diane Von Furstenberg gown from fall 2008 that they were standing beside. Great design does not have an expiration date. Much like great style.

The exhibition runs through November 8th.

Arbiters of Style: Women at the Forefront of Fashion
The Museum at FIT is located on the southwest corner of Seventh Avenue at 27th Street. Exhibition hours are Tuesday through Friday, noon to 8 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; closed Sundays, Mondays and legal holidays. Admission is free. For museum information call (212) 217-4558 or go to www.fitnyc.edu/museum. For further press information, contact the Office of Communications and External Relations at (212) 217-4700 or press@fitnyc.edu. Visuals are available upon request via mail or e-mail.


-Marilyn Kirschner

Labels: ,


+ 5/28/2008; Ernest and Permalink | 0 comments

Comments: Post a Comment