beautyme collections culture cuisine motor music search |
Grand entrance - Fashion in the Ringstrassen era 10 June - 1 November 2009 The Vienna Museum Karlsplatz exhibits the city’s fashion at the end of the 19th century. This fashion was named after an avenue which runs in a circle around the 'Inner City': the Ringstrasse. On this street nobles and industrialists resided in luxurious houses fronted by a promenade; this was the public catwalk where the newest fashion was presented. The Vienna Museum Karlsplatz has the city's most extensive collection of historical costumes. The curators Regina Karner and Michaela Lindinger have selected around 300 pieces like dresses (ball gowns, mourning dresses), costumes, the first leisure and sports dresses such as for tennis, skiing, or riding, the first 'healthy' dresses without corset (known as Reform Dress or Rational Dress), accessories, extraordinary hats, shoes and booties. Paintings of the Viennese Belle Epoque from Hans Makart, Anton Romako and Wilhelm Gause illustrate the lifestyle of the Viennese at the end of the 19th century. Probably fashion shopping had done more for the freedom of women than we ever thought Role models Fashion and women's emancipation The women's emancipation movement started an own fashion revolution. Around 1850, the US feminist Amelie Bloomer has shown that female fashion handicaps women. Feminists 'shocked' with dresses without corsets and trousers for cycling: 'Look, women have legs!' |
|