alb3602144

PAUL POIRET. EVENING DRESS

Evening dress. Culture: French. Designer: Paul Poiret (French, Paris 1879-1944 Paris). Date: ca. 1930.
This dress is from the late period of Poiret's career and shows uncharacteristically refined construction and details.
Paul Poiret was the son of a textile distributor with the ambition and creativity to become a fashion designer.  Brief employment for Jacques Doucet (1853-1929) and the House of Worth (1858-1956) led him to open his own dressmaking shop near the Place de l'Opèra in 1903 at the age of 24.  His first two design albums, "Les Robes de Paul Poiret" drawn by Paul Iribe (1883-1935) in 1908 and "Les Choses de Paul Poiret" created by Georges Lepape (1887-1971) in 1911, not only changed the concept of fashion marketing and illustration, they prophesied the pivotal transition women made from the corseted silhouette of the Victorian age into the natural and sleek un-corseted form of the modern era.  The tubular shape and folkloric trimmings he presented were continuously part of the Poiret vocabulary as well as draping, which proved ingenious in the time of tailoring and drafting.
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Titre: EVENING DRESS
Légende: Voir la traduction automatique
Evening dress. Culture: French. Designer: Paul Poiret (French, Paris 1879-1944 Paris). Date: ca. 1930. This dress is from the late period of Poiret's career and shows uncharacteristically refined construction and details. Paul Poiret was the son of a textile distributor with the ambition and creativity to become a fashion designer. Brief employment for Jacques Doucet (1853-1929) and the House of Worth (1858-1956) led him to open his own dressmaking shop near the Place de l'Opèra in 1903 at the age of 24. His first two design albums, "Les Robes de Paul Poiret" drawn by Paul Iribe (1883-1935) in 1908 and "Les Choses de Paul Poiret" created by Georges Lepape (1887-1971) in 1911, not only changed the concept of fashion marketing and illustration, they prophesied the pivotal transition women made from the corseted silhouette of the Victorian age into the natural and sleek un-corseted form of the modern era. The tubular shape and folkloric trimmings he presented were continuously part of the Poiret vocabulary as well as draping, which proved ingenious in the time of tailoring and drafting.
Technique/matériel: SILK
Musée: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
Crédit: Album
Taille de l'image: 3120 × 4400 px | 39.3 MB
Taille d'impression: 26.4 × 37.3 cm | 1228.3 × 1732.3 in (300 dpi)