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β€œArt is an outlet toward regions which are not ruled by time and space”
— Marcel Duchamp

Avant-Guardian Musings is a curated space of ideas and information, resources, reviews and readings for undergraduate and graduate students studying modern and contemporary art history and visual art theory, film and photography studies, and the expanding field of visual culture and screen studies. For students currently enrolled in my courses or the field school, the blog and associated social media links also serve as a place of reflection and an extension of the ideas and visual material raised in lecture and seminar discussion.

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Blog
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
about 7 months ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago
Top 10 Modern and Contemporary Art Exhibitions Worth Visiting In 2023
Top 10 Modern and Contemporary Art Exhibitions Worth Visiting In 2023
about 2 years ago

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Spring colour story πŸ’™πŸ‘‘πŸ‘©πŸΌ #dopaminedressing 
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#whatiwore #agjeans #flattered #ootd
Spring colour story πŸ’™πŸ‘‘πŸ‘©πŸΌ #dopaminedressing . . . #whatiwore #agjeans #flattered #ootd
New lid! πŸ©ΆπŸ€πŸ–€Look at this sparkling beauty ✨ swipe for video. Thank you Kat @pacificmotosports for the special order Shoei GT-AiR 3 Realm TC-5. I’ve had my eye on this white, silver, and black road helmet since first seeing it in Italy last s
New lid! πŸ©ΆπŸ€πŸ–€Look at this sparkling beauty ✨ swipe for video. Thank you Kat @pacificmotosports for the special order Shoei GT-AiR 3 Realm TC-5. I’ve had my eye on this white, silver, and black road helmet since first seeing it in Italy last summer and finally pulled the trigger. Can’t wait to road test it! . . . #newlid #shoei #shoeigtair #shoeigtair3 #motorcycle #motorcyclelife #sportbikelife #motogirl
Happy International Female Ride Day πŸ’ƒπŸΌπŸοΈπŸ’¨βœ¨πŸ”₯

Learning to ride a motorcycle was a huge turning point in my life. For women, the gifts of riding are wrapped up in building confidence, strength, and being in the moment. You also learn to ignore a l
Happy International Female Ride Day πŸ’ƒπŸΌπŸοΈπŸ’¨βœ¨πŸ”₯ Learning to ride a motorcycle was a huge turning point in my life. For women, the gifts of riding are wrapped up in building confidence, strength, and being in the moment. You also learn to ignore a lot of outside noise and trust your instincts. But it all starts with training. If you or someone you know wants to begin your moto journey, check out @1stgearmoto You can also ask for @barenscott — I am biased, but he is the best teacher I know! . . . #internationalfemalerideday #motorcycles #motogirl #motogirls #zerofucks #sportbikelife #motorcyclelife #aprilia #apriliars660
A rare chance to glimpse our future πŸ’™βœ¨πŸ™ŒπŸ» We don’t often get inside our downtown Kelowna condo (thanks to some amazing tenants over the years) but we are about to turn it over and we were lucky for a perfect Okanagan day. The lake views and s
A rare chance to glimpse our future πŸ’™βœ¨πŸ™ŒπŸ» We don’t often get inside our downtown Kelowna condo (thanks to some amazing tenants over the years) but we are about to turn it over and we were lucky for a perfect Okanagan day. The lake views and space always takes my breath away! We plan to move back here or somewhere close by once we are ready to retire and make good on one of our best investment properties. . . . #kelowna #realestateinvestors #condo #sunsetdrive #investmentproperty # lakeviews #retirementplans
πŸŒΈπŸοΈπŸ’¨πŸŒΈπŸοΈπŸ’¨πŸŒΈπŸοΈπŸ’¨πŸŒΈ
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#hanami #springtime #cherryblossom #motorcycle #motorcyclelife #sportbike #sportbikelife #aprilia #apriliars660 #motogirl #motogirls #vancouver
πŸŒΈπŸοΈπŸ’¨πŸŒΈπŸοΈπŸ’¨πŸŒΈπŸοΈπŸ’¨πŸŒΈ . . . #hanami #springtime #cherryblossom #motorcycle #motorcyclelife #sportbike #sportbikelife #aprilia #apriliars660 #motogirl #motogirls #vancouver

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Β© Dorothy Barenscott, Avant-Guardian Musings, and dorothybarenscott.com, 2010-2023. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Dorothy Barenscott, Avant-Guardian Musings, and dorothybarenscott.com with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Ellar Coltrane stars as Mason Evans, Jr. in Richard Linklater's much buzzed about Boyhood (2014)

Ellar Coltrane stars as Mason Evans, Jr. in Richard Linklater's much buzzed about Boyhood (2014)

The Spectacle of Banality: Why We Are Drawn to Ordinariness

October 07, 2014

I’ve been thinking a lot about ordinariness lately, you know the stuff of life that makes up the majority of our experience. Maybe it’s because I had such an unremarkable and oh so relaxing summerβ€”a much needed break from the relentless pace of work, travel, and a big move that had taken up much of my attention in the two years priorβ€” or maybe it is a sense that I am finally settling into a knowable routine and set of daily patterns that I can comfortably count on. For that I am actually quite grateful. Whatever it is, my focus has shifted over the summer to really notice and pay attention to much of the buzz building around works of literature, film, and television that focus on banality as core content. It appears as if the everyday is having a real moment artistically, and the reasons may be as simple as something cultural theorist Jean Baudrillard wrote in CTheory in 2001:

β€œWhat people deeply desire is a spectacle of banality. This spectacle of banality is today’s true pornography and obscenity…At a time when television and the media in general are less and less capable of accounting for (rendre compte) the world’s (unbearable) events, they rediscover daily life.”
— Jean Baudrillard

Take for example this past year’s celebrated Norwegian novelist Karl Ove Knausgaard, the author of a six-volume autobiography titled My Struggle that has become a global literary sensation and has earned Knausgaard the acclaim of being a modern day Proust. Each of the 500 page volumes of the series is a recollection of the author’s everyday life, beginning from childhood and moving to adulthood, and the minutiae of life is featured at every turn. Pages and pages of it. In fact, the reader is brought into such intimate contact with the author’s thoughts and everyday reflections that there seems to be a complete dismissal of the conventions of memoir, narrative, or logical transitions in storytelling that one would expect of a novel. The author Zadie Smith, in a review of the novels in NYRB, compared the feeling of reading Knausgaard to living β€œhis life with him.”

The premise behind this year’s much anticipated Richard Linklater film Boyhood is very similar. Following up on the success of his film trilogy made over almost twenty years tracking one couple’s fictitious relationship as they moved from their twenties to their forties (Before Sunrise (1995); Before Sunset (2004); and Before Midnight (2013)), Linklater took up the challenge of selecting a cast and making a film over twelve years, shooting only for a few weeks each summer, to allow the camera to capture the subtleties of one boy’s coming of age story from childhood to young adulthood. The film itself is intentional in its banalityβ€”no melodrama or Hollywood plot turnsβ€” and for many audiences this is a relief as the enduring charm of the film has to do with recognizing the ordinary moments that we too share as part of our own coming of age experience. The distinction between the film’s central character, Mason Evans Jr., and the actor who plays him, Ellar Coltrane, almost slips away as we watch both boys (real and represented) age into young men before our eyes.

It is in the context of the pleasurable ordinariness and relatable moments of life that we also find the successful TV shows Louie, starring stand up comedian Louis C.K., and Girls, starring writer Lena Dunham. In both shows, we see the blurring of lines between the lives of C.K. and Dunham and their respective television characters. We see Louie and Hannah as mirrors reflecting the inner worlds of Louis and Lena. In both shows as well, there is an attempt to script and represent the lives, conversations, and worlds of the show’s characters as closely as possible to the way we would expect them to exist in the commonplace. In other words, the conversations are often boring, the sex is less than mindblowing (or pretty), the naked bodies are real ones, and the plots are slow-moving or non-existent.

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Louie-FX-Season-4.jpeg Girls-Season-3-Promotional-Poster.jpg Boyhood_film.jpg

It is true that in the past several months we have been collectively witnessing major global upheavals, national conflicts, citizen protests (local and international), and news of environmental disasters and health epidemics on what seems like an unprecedented scale. I don’t need to list them hereβ€”you know what they are from your social media news feeds or you can turn on CNN to catch up quickly. It is difficult and exhausting to even know where to begin in terms of accounting for and making sense of it all, and the tendency is indeed to give up trying.

So is the everyday a kind of escape for us? Does the spectacle of banality, as Baudrillard suggests, provide a retreat from real world crises we would prefer to ignore? Perhaps. But it might be in the observation of banality that we recharge and rediscover something of ourselves once more. We appreciate those little moments that come to shape our life’s experienceβ€”the morning conversation with family, the chance encounter on the street, the time spent staring out a window or doing the laundry, a glimpse of ourselves in the mirror. Maybe it is simply a reconnection with our own humanity that we crave, a much needed recharge to deal with life’s more extraordinary and unexpected moments. Or maybe this is all just a passing fad. Whatever it is, there is a comfort in ordinariness that we can all recognize. 

 Further Reading: 

Jean Baudrillard, β€œDust Breeding.” Translated by Francois Debrix. CTHEORY, October 2001.

 

 

 

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So many VIFF films, so little time...

So many VIFF films, so little time...

Vancouver International Film Festival, One Week Down and One Week Left: Ten VIFF Films to Watch

October 05, 2014

It's the most wonderful time of the year...... ah VIFF, how much do I love thee and how much do I wish that I had more time and stamina to attend all of the films on my long list. The Vancouver International Film Festival is in full swing and has been running since September 25th and will close at the end of this week on October 10th.

I have already attended a number of great screenings-- so far, my hands down favourite for sheer jaw dropping visuals and spatial phantasmagoria overload is the epic three hours I spent watching Cathedrals of Culture. This was a 3D film project involving six directors (Wim Wenders, Michael Glawogger, Michael Madsen, Robert Redford, Margret Olin, and Karim Ainouz) exploring six iconic buildings through the simple question, "If buildings could talk, what would they say about us?" The film continues to stay with me and will prove very inspiring when I return to teaching the History of Architecture in the near future. However, I don't want to tell you about all the films I have seen that you can't watch anymore, so allow me to offer some suggestions for the remaining days of VIFF.

With less than a week left, and with many of my own students left with the task of viewing a screening as part of a class assignment (or for bonus points!), I thought I might share some titles for films to catch before VIFF closes. Among the films listed in the slider (click through for more information on the VIFF website) are picks that I am either planning on viewing this week, movies friends and colleagues have seen already and recommend, and of course those films that couldn't fit my schedule but are on that long wish list. I do hope that if you are in the city and get a chance to attend a screening, you come out and support one of the best celebrations of film that Vancouver enjoys each year. Many of the festival favourites do get a second life in future screenings around town (I will continue to tweet or share these on Facebook in the coming weeks and months), but there is nothing quite like the buzz and energy of attending a VIFF screening. Enjoy!

Regarding Susan Sontag
Regarding Susan Sontag

"Susan Sontag’s contributions to the intellectual zeitgeist of the 1960s, 70s and 80s is beyond reproach for its seriousness of purpose and wide-ranging influence." 

Art and Craft
Art and Craft

β€œNothing is original under the sun now,” explains spindly, sleepy-voiced Mark Landis, an unlikely yet internationally prolific art forger. Prone to mischievousness and philanthropic binges, Landis has managed to donate some 100 forged artworksβ€”everything from works by Picasso to a Dr. Seuss drawing."

Mr. Turner
Mr. Turner

"A labour of love from Mike Leigh, this warts-and-Spall portrait of 19th-century landscape artist J.M.W. Turner may also be a self-portrait Γ  clef (though the famously contrarian Leigh inevitably denies it)." 

Revivre
Revivre

"In Korean, Hwajang has two possible meaningsβ€”"Live again" and "Make-up"β€”and both are relevant to this masterly film. Im Kwontaek is of course Korea’s greatest living director, the last man standing from the Chungmuro studio system, Korea’s answer to Hollywood." 

Something Must Break
Something Must Break

"Collecting the prestigious Tiger Award at its Rotterdam debut, Something Must Break elevates the typically generic romance of young love to liberating new heights."

The Vancouver Asahi
The Vancouver Asahi

"Once upon a time in Vancouver, there was a baseball team called the Asahi, This was in the 1930s, when the city had a small Japantown on the downtown wharves, and the team was formed by the Canadian-born kids of immigrants."

Handmade With Love In France
Handmade With Love In France

"The French titleβ€”time suspendedβ€”perfectly captures this affectionate celebration of the artisans who create fabulous haute-couture outfits for Dior, Chanel and Yves Saint Laurent"

The Great Museum
The Great Museum

"In this eye-opening documentary, Johannes Holzhauzen takes us behind the scenes to explore one of the world’s greatest museums: the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien. It’s a fascinating peek behind the curtains..."

A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night
A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night

"Looking for love (and hemoglobin) in the desolate streets of Iranian ghost town Bad City, an alluring vampire (Sheila Vand, entrancing) must also navigate the comically offbeat, unequivocally cool reality envisioned by director Ana Lily Amirpour."

Ilya and Emilia Kabakov: Enter Here
Ilya and Emilia Kabakov: Enter Here

"Generally considered the most important living Russian artists, the husband-wife team of Ilya and Emilia Kabakov ("Ilya paints and draws. I do everything else,” Emilia has said) gave their full cooperation to this "marvelous documentary film"." 

Regarding Susan Sontag Art and Craft Mr. Turner Revivre Something Must Break The Vancouver Asahi Handmade With Love In France The Great Museum A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night Ilya and Emilia Kabakov: Enter Here
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Frederic Bazille, Bazille's Studio (1870)

Frederic Bazille, Bazille's Studio (1870)

Courses for Fall 2014: Topics in New Media, Film Studies, and Renaissance to Modern Art

June 10, 2014

As registration for Fall 2014 academic courses begins soon, I wanted to provide more information about courses I will begin teaching in September, 2014. Please see detailed descriptions below. If you have any specific questions that are not answered here or in the links I provide you to the registration for the courses, you can contact me directly. I look forward to another rich and engaging semester with both new and familiar faces.


ARTH 3150: NEW MEDIA IN ART: HISTORY & THEORY

Kwantlen Polytechnic University (Mondays 1:00-2:50pm, Surrey Campus Fir 3414)

Stan Douglas, Abbott and Cordova, 7 August 1971 (2008)

Stan Douglas, Abbott and Cordova, 7 August 1971 (2008)

This course offers a critical and historical examination of β€œnew media” and the influence of technological, digital, computerized, and networked information and communication technologies in the development of new formats of art making. Looking first to the history of late nineteenth and early twentieth century avant-garde stagings and engagement with new technologies of seeing (through photography and early cinema for example), the course will examine how innovative ideas about representation and free use of materials in the art of cubism, futurism, surrealism and dada set out to re-envision the strict adherence to traditional hierarchies of art represented by painting and sculpture. The course will then explore how artists and art movements of the last fifty years have embraced new media formats to further their visions. From conceptual photography to video, collage to assemblage, installation to performance, digital to virtual environments, new media formats have extended notions of what art could materially consist of, but have also affected the anticipation of audiences for that work, having social as well as aesthetic implications. An important aspect of the course will therefore involve thinking about how contemporary new media practices must be understood in a broader historical and social context involving changing ideas about time, duration, and narrative, notions of embodiment, and the turn to a digitally mediated world. Ultimately, our attention will be on the network where new media art is made, exhibited, and reacted to by different parties, and to the ways that portions of the art system have conceived of and explained the workings of such a system and the society it exists within. 


ARTH 1130: INTRODUCTION TO FILM STUDIES

Kwantlen Polytechnic University (Fridays 1:00-4:50pm, Surrey Campus Fir 128)

Jean-Luc Godard, Breathless (1960)

Jean-Luc Godard, Breathless (1960)

Students will study the history and development of world cinema, and the comprehension and theory of film as a visual language and art-making practice from its inception in the late nineteenth century to the present. The goal of the course is to introduce students to the critical interpretation of the cinema and the various vocabularies and methods with which one can explore the aesthetic function, together with the social, political, and technological contexts and developments, of moving pictures. The weekly format of this course (as a 4 hour block) will normally entail a 1.5-2 hour lecture and the screening of a full-length film. Each film will thus serve as a starting point and gateway for discussion about the course’s weekly theme.


ARTH 1121: RENAISSANCE TO TWENTIETH CENTURY ART

Kwantlen Polytechnic University (Mondays 7:00-9:50pm, Richmond Campus Main 2500)

Edouard Manet, A Bar at the Folies Bergere (1881-82)

Edouard Manet, A Bar at the Folies Bergere (1881-82)

This course provides students with an introduction to the art, architecture, and visual culture of Western Europe and North America from the fifteenth century to the turn of the twentieth century. Major works representing principal historical periods will be studied in detail in order to illuminate the social, cultural, and political factors contributing to both the production and the reception of visual art. This class is not intended to be all-inclusive in which each and every monument contributing to the β€œcanon” of Western art is studied. Rather, we will consider the constructed nature of the discipline of art history in order to trouble assumptions, both historical and contemporary, regarding the nature of art, its relation to different social and political institutions, and issues of patronage and viewing publics. Furthermore, through an introduction to critical and historical methods, students will develop the basic tools and terminology for analyzing visual art and culture, a skill set of crucial importance in understanding the barrage of images and technological stimulus at play in our postmodern world.


FPA 167: VISUAL ART & CULTURE I 

Simon Fraser University (Thursdays 6:30-9:20pm, Vancouver Harbour Centre Campus 1800)

Caspar David Friedrich, The Abbey in the Oakwood (1809-1810)

Caspar David Friedrich, The Abbey in the Oakwood (1809-1810)

This course provides an introduction to the complex ways in which social and political change, and ideologies of gender, class, race and ethnicity, worked to shape aspects of nineteenth century visual culture in Europe and North America. Emphasis will be placed on the roles played by industrialization, political revolution, rapid urban growth, global commerce, and the new media technologies of an expanding consumer culture in defining a wide range of visual culture. Throughout the term we will also examine different representations and debates around the idea of modernity and the β€œmodern.” Since the time period under investigation has often been called β€œThe First Modern Century”, we will pay particular attention to shifting ideas related to labour and leisure, urban social space and spectacle, and issues bearing on Euro-American expansion of empires in relation to indigenous populations, throughout the nineteenth  century to turn of the twentieth century up to WWI.



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Throwback Thursday: Art 21's "New York Close Up" Series

May 22, 2014

Back in the summer of 2011, I blogged about a compelling media project that the non-profit contemporary art organization Art 21 was launching called "New York Close Up"-- a web series following the lives of ten artists in the first decade of their professional career following grad school. As graduation ceremonies are just around the corner for many BFA and MFA students, I decided to revisit the series this week and feature it as part of my contribution to Throwback Thursday. At this time of year, the process of reflecting on the path one takes beyond university and art school is especially heightened and so I see this project in the vein of Sharon Louden's recent book Living and Sustaining a Creative Life: Essays by 40 Working Artists, a book I recently added to my book wish list and a text that has struck a chord with many friends and colleagues about the realities of committing to a life in the arts. The original series can be found at Art 21's YouTube page and can be viewed in order (scroll to the bottom for the list to watch the oldest episodes first).

I have posted below two of my favourite films from the original series. The first is an episode featuring artist Shana Moulton, an aspiring performance artist and chronicles a day in her life as she prepares for an upcoming opening. As the Art 21 summary describes, "Moulton considers her aesthetic ambitions, audience expectations, and the pragmatics of being an artist in New York." The second episode features artist Tommy Hartung and his recollections of how he decided to become an artist and how he and his fellow artist friends survive and thrive as a community in the city. "Making New York his home since the mid-2000s" the Art 21 film synopsis reveals, "Hartung shares how he's developed a calculus for surviving and succeeding as an artist in the city."

One of the unexpected benefits of revisiting the series was the discovery that the project has continued to live on well beyond the 2011 launch. I am looking forward to catching up on the newly featured artists, and I am including here one of the more recent additions to the series featuring artist and art instructor Josephine Halvorson leading undergraduate students through a painting class group critique. This short film is sure to be of interest to many who have either lived through this process as a student/instructor, or wonder about what takes place during the mysterious critique process. The comments and feedback are quite raw and authentic, and I think that the reflection on how the critique works (or fails) is especially honest.


Tags: Throwback Thursday
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The Met Costume Institute provided several looks inside the Charles James exhibition via Instragram on the night of the Met Ball.  "Charles James: Beyond Fashion" continues through August 10th at the Metropolitan Musueum of Art.

The Met Costume Institute provided several looks inside the Charles James exhibition via Instragram on the night of the Met Ball.  "Charles James: Beyond Fashion" continues through August 10th at the Metropolitan Musueum of Art.

An Architect of Cloth: Charles James "Beyond Fashion" at the Met

May 08, 2014

Over the past several years, the Metropolitan Museum's Costume Institute has been attracting a great deal of interest for creating bold exhibitions focusing on the art of fashion. The Alexander McQueen "Savage Beauty" show in 2011 and last year's "Punk: Chaos to Couture" exhibition are especially outstanding for the kinds of conversations they sparked about the intersections between avant-garde fashion and modern/contemporary art. This year's selection of a seemingly traditional evening gown designer thus seemed an odd move for the museum. Charles James to the average person, or even those with some rudimentary knowledge of fashion history, is certainly not a designer that comes to mind as especially iconic or transgressive. But it is clear upon closer research and consideration that James was influential and well respected as a true artist and quiet innovator within the fashion industry.  In the New York Times this week, art critic Roberta Smith in reviewing the Met's exhibition described James' designs as equal to that of other innovators of the past century. "It reveals an artist" writes Smith "as interested in visual spectacle and extremes as McQueen, but with a more classical, architectural mien and a more subtle sense of ostentation. One of James’s most stunning ball gowns is an ivory silk satin number with four voluptuous, bustle-like forms protruding at the front, back and sides. It has been described as resembling a half-open parachute and is also a kind of walking soft sculpture." 

The New York Times produced a behind the scene's slide show that can be viewed on their website

The New York Times produced a behind the scene's slide show that can be viewed on their website

Digging a bit further, we learn that James was the first designer to be collected by an American art museum-- the Brooklyn Museum-- which leant the exhibition forty garments for the show. As many commentators have noted this week, James' interest in space and architectural forms helped influence the silhouette and shapes we think of in fashion today as especially modern. The comparison of his designs to the modern art of New York in the 1950's and 60's (in particular the work of abstract expressionists) is also especially compelling here. Smith refers to James' designs as "a sartorial sublime" in this vein, and there is certainly a sense in all of the discussion that a well-deserved place in fashion history is being made for James that links his aesthetic to an especially American modern art sensibility.

Charles James photographed by Cecil Beaton in Interview Magazine (1972)

Charles James photographed by Cecil Beaton in Interview Magazine (1972)

In 1972 when James was featured in Warhol's Interview Magazine, he was characterized even back then as a reclusive designer, known for an intense dedication to his craft and the skill set required to execute his highly structured and painstakingly elaborate designs. This at a time when the casualization of fashion was well underway. Living and working in the famed Chelsea Hotel that helped foster the 1960's counterculture, he spoke candidly about the timeless and enduring quality of his designs in the face of trends, fashion transitions, and outright plagiarism: "I don't think that my work has ever been out of date, in that it was only ahead of its time, therefore it was only a matter of waiting until it became a New Look; and right now I feel that what I'm working on can replace the tacky, fag-hag-drag that which has been passed off as fashion by those who never learned the rudiments of cutting and fitting; usually working from sketches and plagiarizing the process designs produced by the couture markets of the world." 

To be sure, there will be those who argue that the Charles James exhibition is too restrained, conservative, and even elitist as a follow-up to the McQueen and Punk shows of the past several years. I am still undecided on this count, but I do think that the title "Beyond Fashion" suggests that the Met Costume Institute is continuing to push forward the argument started with these earlier shows about the relevance and place of fashion as a worthy form of art. That they chose to celebrate a formalist and less overtly avant-garde or "sexy" artist is a tactic not dissimilar to the one used by modern art museums when they seek to tell the complete history of art through retrospectives of lesser known (at least to the public) artists. It is the sketches, patterns, material, and work that become the focus in the Charles James exhibition, and these are essential components to the workings of fashion design and production that are often missed by today's fashion consumers.

Tags: fashion, exhibitions
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Β© Dorothy Barenscott, 2010-2025