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Nationally Touring Show Explores Japan’s Traditional National Dress from Early to Mid 20th Century

February 1, 2010 by  
Filed under Artifacts & Decorative Arts

ROCHESTER, NY.- Well into the last century, Japan’s traditional national dress–the kimono–was worn by men, women and children of all social classes. Deceptively simple in concept–a one-piece, front-wrap garment with a straight silhouette–the kimono lent itself to endless variations in color, pattern and design that signaled age, gender, status, occasion, even the change of seasons.

A nationally touring exhibition that opens January 31 at the Memorial Art Gallery showcases nearly 100 extraordinary examples from the famed Montgomery Collection in Lugano, Switzerland. FASHIONING KIMONO: ART DECO AND MODERNISM IN JAPAN brings together everyday garments; intricately embroidered ceremonial robes; boys’ kimono stenciled with cars, airplanes and battleships; and colorful Art Deco patterns heralding the emergence of Japan’s “new woman.”

Woman’s formal long sleeved kimono uchikake early Showa period 1930s 580x406 Nationally Touring Show Explores Japans Traditional National Dress from Early to Mid 20th Century
Woman’s formal, long-sleeved kimono (uchikake); early Showa period, 1930s. Silk, figured satin weave (rinzu), opposing lines and floral roundels pattern; hand-painted, rice-paste resist outlining; gold leaf, silk thread embroidery; 70 x 49 1/4 inches (detail). The Jeffrey Montgomery Collection

All were created between the 1890s and the 1950s, a dynamic period when technological advances in silk making and the influence of Western styles resulted in an explosion of bold and vibrant designs. This period was also to be the last era of the “living” kimono. After World War II, more affordable Western clothing became the norm, though the kimono continues to be worn for formal events such as weddings and funerals, and increasingly as a fashion statement.

FASHIONING KIMONO is organized and circulated by Art Services International, Alexandria, VA.

At MAG, it remains on view through April 4.

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