Pagan
Evening Suit
1938-1939 (designed)
1938-1939 (designed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This stylish ensemble was worn by Lady Alexandra Dacre (then Lady Alexandra Haig) at a masked carol party in December 1938. It was designed by Elsa Schiaparelli (1890-1973). Schiaparelli was born in Rome. She studied philosophy, spent her early married life in the USA in Boston and New York, and in 1920 moved to Paris. One of her first designs, a black sweater knitted with a white bow to give a trompe-l'œil (trick of the eye) effect, was seen by a store buyer and subsequent orders put her into business. In 1928 she opened a shop called Pour le Sport. Her own salon followed a year later.
Schiaparelli was famed for her attractive and wittily designed evening ensembles. Her clothes were smart, sophisticated and often wildly eccentric, but she had a huge following. Her ideas, coupled with those she commissioned from famous artists, were carried out with considerable skill. Salvador Dalí, Christian Bérard and Jean Cocteau, for example, designed fabrics and accessories. Jean Schlumberger produced costume jewellery and buttons. Cubism and Surrealism influenced her designs. She used tweed to make evening wear and hessian for dresses. She dyed furs, put padlocks on suits and created a vogue for Tyrolean peasant costume.
In 1935 she dyed plastic zippers the same colour as her fabrics and then positioned them in exposed places rather than concealing them as dress closings, making their use both decorative and functional. This bias-cut dress, for example, fastens at the side with a bold plastic 'Lightning' zip.
Schiaparelli was famed for her attractive and wittily designed evening ensembles. Her clothes were smart, sophisticated and often wildly eccentric, but she had a huge following. Her ideas, coupled with those she commissioned from famous artists, were carried out with considerable skill. Salvador Dalí, Christian Bérard and Jean Cocteau, for example, designed fabrics and accessories. Jean Schlumberger produced costume jewellery and buttons. Cubism and Surrealism influenced her designs. She used tweed to make evening wear and hessian for dresses. She dyed furs, put padlocks on suits and created a vogue for Tyrolean peasant costume.
In 1935 she dyed plastic zippers the same colour as her fabrics and then positioned them in exposed places rather than concealing them as dress closings, making their use both decorative and functional. This bias-cut dress, for example, fastens at the side with a bold plastic 'Lightning' zip.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Parts | This object consists of 2 parts.
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Title | Pagan (named collection) |
Materials and techniques | Rayon marocain, backed with satin, embroidered with various gilt threads, beads and diamantés, lined in crêpe-de-Chine |
Brief description | Evening ensemble consisting of satin dress and jacket, designed by Schiaparelli, London, fall 1938. (Pagan Collection). |
Physical description | Evening ensemble consisting of satin dress and jacket. |
Credit line | Given by Lady Alexandra Trevor-Roper |
Object history | Another version of this jacket is held by the Metropolitan Museum, New York. (Met Museum number 1974.338.4) Photo notes: Collar front: leaves are encroaching upon the neckline and neck. Leaf shaped buttons. Likely from the Pagan collection (1938). Pocket detail: pouch shaped pockets at the bottom Front: Classic padded shoulders. Very classic Schiaparelli dinner suit Jan G. Reeder, Curator, The Costume Institute, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Taken May, 2011, Compiled September, 2011 |
Summary | This stylish ensemble was worn by Lady Alexandra Dacre (then Lady Alexandra Haig) at a masked carol party in December 1938. It was designed by Elsa Schiaparelli (1890-1973). Schiaparelli was born in Rome. She studied philosophy, spent her early married life in the USA in Boston and New York, and in 1920 moved to Paris. One of her first designs, a black sweater knitted with a white bow to give a trompe-l'œil (trick of the eye) effect, was seen by a store buyer and subsequent orders put her into business. In 1928 she opened a shop called Pour le Sport. Her own salon followed a year later. Schiaparelli was famed for her attractive and wittily designed evening ensembles. Her clothes were smart, sophisticated and often wildly eccentric, but she had a huge following. Her ideas, coupled with those she commissioned from famous artists, were carried out with considerable skill. Salvador Dalí, Christian Bérard and Jean Cocteau, for example, designed fabrics and accessories. Jean Schlumberger produced costume jewellery and buttons. Cubism and Surrealism influenced her designs. She used tweed to make evening wear and hessian for dresses. She dyed furs, put padlocks on suits and created a vogue for Tyrolean peasant costume. In 1935 she dyed plastic zippers the same colour as her fabrics and then positioned them in exposed places rather than concealing them as dress closings, making their use both decorative and functional. This bias-cut dress, for example, fastens at the side with a bold plastic 'Lightning' zip. |
Collection | |
Accession number | T.399&A-1974 |
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Record created | February 25, 2003 |
Record URL |
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