- 160 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Modernizing Costume Design, 1820–1920
About This Book
Annie Holt identifies the roots of contemporary Euro-American practices of costume design, in which costumes are an integrated part of the dramaturgy rather than a reflection of an individual performer's taste or status. She argues that in the period 1820–1920, as part of the larger project of modernism across the artistic and cultural field, the functions of "clothing" and "costume" diverged. Onstage apparel took on a more specific semiotic task, acting as a fresh channel for the flow of information between the performer, the literary text, and the spectator.
Modernizing Costume Design traces how five kinds of artists – directors, performers, writers, couturiers, and painters – made key contributions to this new model of costume design. Holt shows that by 1920, costume design shifted in status from craft to art.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Series Information
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures
- 1 Introduction: Arguing costume design
- 2 Material truths: Directors, historicism, and Shakespearean designs
- 3 Frocks and fictions: Actresses, personae, and costume design
- 4 Writing the modern body: The queerness of costume stage directions
- 5 Life imitates art: Couture, costumes, and commercialism
- 6 Body as art(ifact) or machine: Visual artists design for the Ballets Russes
- 7 Postlude: Designing modernism
- Index