In a completely different spirit – a white,
neutral space – is the exhibition showing XX Century Costume up to the present
day.
Costume of the 20th century
1910-2000
The Republic implanted in Portugal on
October 5, 1910 puts an end to the monarchy and transforms the social dynamics
of Portuguese life. Many formalisms and social constraints have disappeared and
the arts, as well as fashion, have been the scene of several changes. Sports
and outdoor activities promoted a new lifestyle, and ladies preferred men's
cut-out suits, such as the tailleur. Of English origin, the tailleur formed by
skirt and jacket adapted well to the walks and was especially appreciated by
the young people who increasingly integrated the labor market.
1910-1918
Portuguese women quickly joined a new slim
silhouette proposed in Paris
by Paul Poiret. Inspired by the costume of the Napoleonic period, this
couturier proposed the use of dresses to replace the two-piece womens suits
used up. Her dresses showed straight lines and high waist, which allowed the
woman to free herself from the corset. In Paris ,
the Ballets Russes de Diaghilev inspired fashion, bringing orientalizing
influences for clothing through new forms, bright colors and luxurious fabrics.
The masculine costume kept the forms of the
end of the last century. On solemn occasions, the coat and coat was worn, in
everyday life the frock coat began to be replaced by the short coat with a vest
and trousers.
1920-1930
Women's clothing has given this decade the
definitive step to functionality, following the Art Deco style, characterized
by a decorative and elegant geometry. The straight-line dresses with a slack
waist showed her legs from her knees. The dresses for dancing were short with
round or square necklines, usually with a skirt in it and sometimes covered
with beads, sequins and beads. The stockings and shoes became pieces of relief,
filling with colors. The colors were vivid, although black was also chosen.
In the men's costume of the 1920s, the use
of coats of tweed, spined or chess-tiled coats of sober tones, accompanied by
wide trousers with pleats and folds at the lower end, in plain or fancy fabric
were generalized in the cities. The tuxedo has definitely become the preferred
male costume for semi-informal events such as public or private dinners, dances
and parties. Black in color with silk satin lapels, it was accompanied by a tie
of the same tone.
1930-1946
In the 1930 's, women's dress returned to
more curvaceous lines, the length of the skirt came down and the waist returned
to its natural position. The evening dresses were long, with bare backs. The
most appreciated fabrics were crepes and satins. The movie actresses, with
their glamor, inspired women and became role models. Madeleine Vionnet created
the cut in bias, a technique that gave the pieces a much appreciated elasticity
and fluidity, molding the female bodies in a sensual way.
The Second World War (1939-1945) caused
enormous material constraints. The rationing imposed tight and short dress
pieces. The women wore tailleurs with a tight waistline, a straight-line skirt,
plucked shoulders, and wide pockets that gave their silhouette a masculine,
almost military-inspired stance.
1947 to 1950
With the end of World War II, Christian
Dior responded to women's longings by creating a feminine and luxurious
silhouette. The style proposed by the French couturier was called New-Look, as
it emerged as a reaction to the functional fashion of the 1940s. Presented in Paris in 1947, he intended
to restore to women the sensual aspect. This new image was characterized by the
use of straight or broad skirts, very round and arched, narrow and delicate
waist, small shoulders and round, and body corseted with well defined chest.
At the same time as the New Look appearance
was in place, a restless, middle-class generation emerged, rejecting the
materialism in force. In the United
States the t-shirts were transformed into
outer parts, especially after Marlon Brando have appeared with a t-shirt White
in the movie " On the Waterfront " in 1954. The jeans, known as jeans,
began to be adopted by young people as an expression of their rebellion.
1960 to 1970
The Sixties represented a new change in
costume. Youth became a model to follow, conveying an attitude of nonconformity
and contestation to the politics and mentality in force. The fashion moves left
the street and began to influence the Haute Couture. Clothing manufacturers saw
young potential customers and started to create parts especially for them. At
the base of the feminine fashion of this decade the miniskirt, presented by
André Courrèges, in 1965, and popularized by Mary Quant.
At the end of this decade appeared in San Francisco , California ,
the hippie movement that was before a movement of mentalities and spread
through pop music. Their clothing was inspired by the international ethnic
dresses: the boys wore robes of raw cotton and jeans, they had long hair and
beards; the girls wore long robes, wore their hair loose with flowers, and
their faces without makeup.
1980 to 2000
Ready-to-wear brands began to gain
importance with the emergence of designers who, along with Haute Couture,
helped to balance the massification of the fashion industry. The relative
stability and prosperity of the 1980s favored, once again, the revival of
traditional values and tastes. However, the 1990s were international, giving
a fair share to the global village. The television, fashion magazines, the
tourism and the internet undid the borders, enabling the dissemination of
creations have not only French but Italian, English, Japanese and American.
Ready-to-wear brands have developed at an
ever-increasing pace to respond to those who wish to convey a contested
appearance. On the other hand, fashion designers emerge and what came to be
called "fashion author", which attributes to create an alternative of
quality and style to the massification that the development of the textile and
confection industry were operating.
Trends:
The Lean Silhouette
Women promptly followed the new slender and
lean silhouette proposed by Paul Poiret, who dictated fashion in Paris .
Straight Line
Dresses were straight lined and high
waisted, enabling women to free themselves from the corset.
The Roaring Twenties
The 1920’ s, or the Roaring Twenties, was a decade of
prosperity, pursuit of pleasure, nightlife enjoyment and artistic renovation.
Straight Lines
The dresses were cut in straight lines, had
low waists and showed the legs above the knees.
Nonconformist Attitude
The 1960’ s typified a new change in dress. Youth became
the model to take after, conveying a nonconformist attitude and opposing
politics and mentalities of the time. Fashion movements came from the streets
and influenced Haute Couture.
The Avant-Garde
Paco Rabanne, André Courrèges and Pierre
Cardin embodied the avant-garde tendencies of the 1960’ s and were associated with the futuristic
fashion.
The Maxi-Skirt
Young fashion trends in the seventies
included the maxi-skirt, hot pants and long trousers.
Return to Nature
The Seventies
Yves Saint Laurent was the couturier who
represented the height of chic in the seventies and his name became a synonym
for elegance.
Ready to Wear
Yves Saint Laurent was the man who set the
image of the 1970s, although he had launched in 1966 the trouser suit and the
Haute Couture smoking for women. His ready-to-wear creations issued fundamental
articles for the modern women clothing.
Ecological Consciousness
In the nineties the ecological
consciousness is emphasized and news forms of spirituality emerge, and there
are new ideas coming to the fore based on a broad, global humanitarian outlook.
The Minimalist
Fashion developed in two major directions:
the minimalist and the spectacular.
Portuguese Fashion
A large number of portuguese fashion
designed have emerged and been successful since 1980s.
The Museu Nacional do Traje e da Moda is
located in Monteiro-Mor Palace , in Lisbon ,
Portugal . It
has a collection of 33.000 items, which includes mainly masculine and feminine
costumes from the 18th and 19th centuries.
The museum is located in a vast property
acquired by the Portuguese
State in 1975. This
property - a former farmhouse of eighteenth-century recreation - has an
extensive green area now open to the public and known as - Botanical
Monteiro-Mor park, and its headquarters are urged in an 18th century building -
thePalace Angeja-Palmela.
Its purpose is to establish a strategy for
the research, conservation and public exhibition of costumes and textiles.
Furthermore, it has a policy of safeguarding and promoting the Monteiro-Mor Botanic Park
and supporting this heritage among the community.
Collections
The collections of the institution include
collections of civilian clothing - women, men and children, national and
international - and their accessories, fragments of fabrics and bragal pieces,
materials and equipment that testify to the textile, costume and accessory
production processes.
The first offerings of pieces date from 1974 in the registries of the National Museum of the Costume, all of them of
individuals. The public collection that integrated its collection came from the
National Museum of the Cars that, since 1904,
collected an important collection of costumes of the Royal House.
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