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La Bastille (Sans-culotte 1789)

Colour Lithograph
c.1910 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is one of a series of eighteen lithographs created in Paris in about 1910 by a French artist who signs himself "Laviny". Their subject matter is of beautiful women dressed in fantastical and extraordinary costumes which represent various aspects of Paris. Whilst the outfits are ultra-fashionable in silhouette, they are very exaggerated and were probably not intended to be made up in real-life, but were made to amuse and for decorative purposes. The lithographs were printed by Fattorini et Crespin of Paris.

This costume embodies the Bastille, the notorious fortress that acted as a Royal prison before being demolished during the French Revolution. Despite its destruction, the Bastille retains a major role in French popular culture. The costume chosen to represent it is a feminised version of the striped linen trousers worn by the male Revolutionaries, or "sans-culottes", who stormed and destroyed the Bastille in 1789-90. The trousers, interpreted here as a skirt, are worn with a man's tail-coat with the sleeves removed and worn over a loosely draped bodice. On her head she wears a Phrygian cap, traditionally worn by the revolutionaries because of its symbolism as a cap of liberty, representing freedom from tyranny. For this reason the Phrygian cap is frequently shown being worn by Marianne, the embodiment of post-revolutionary France.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleLa Bastille (Sans-culotte 1789) (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
colour lithograph
Brief description
Laviny. "La Bastille (Sans-culotte 1789)". Design for a fantasy costume representing an aspect of Paris. Published by Fattorini & Crespin, Paris. c. 1910
Physical description
Colour lithograph showing an attractive woman dressed in an elaborate, exaggerated fancy-dress or theatrical costume representing a neighbourhood or institution of Paris. One of a set of 18.
Credit line
Given by the House of Worth
Object history
This print is part of a very large collection of reference material including fashion plates, engravings, original drawings and illustrations that were collected by the fashion design house of Paquin at the turn of the 19th/20th centuries. Many bear the stamp of Paquin's archivist at the time. They were acquired by the V&A in 1957 when, following the closure of the combined houses of Paquin and Worth, the Worth/Paquin archives and design books were donated to the Museum.
Summary
This is one of a series of eighteen lithographs created in Paris in about 1910 by a French artist who signs himself "Laviny". Their subject matter is of beautiful women dressed in fantastical and extraordinary costumes which represent various aspects of Paris. Whilst the outfits are ultra-fashionable in silhouette, they are very exaggerated and were probably not intended to be made up in real-life, but were made to amuse and for decorative purposes. The lithographs were printed by Fattorini et Crespin of Paris.

This costume embodies the Bastille, the notorious fortress that acted as a Royal prison before being demolished during the French Revolution. Despite its destruction, the Bastille retains a major role in French popular culture. The costume chosen to represent it is a feminised version of the striped linen trousers worn by the male Revolutionaries, or "sans-culottes", who stormed and destroyed the Bastille in 1789-90. The trousers, interpreted here as a skirt, are worn with a man's tail-coat with the sleeves removed and worn over a loosely draped bodice. On her head she wears a Phrygian cap, traditionally worn by the revolutionaries because of its symbolism as a cap of liberty, representing freedom from tyranny. For this reason the Phrygian cap is frequently shown being worn by Marianne, the embodiment of post-revolutionary France.
Bibliographic reference
Victoria and Albert Museum Department of Prints and Drawings and Department of Paintings Accessions 1957-1958 London: HMSO, 1964
Collection
Accession number
E.22255-1957

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
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