Beauty on the Beach: A Centennial Celebration of Swimwear at The Wolfsonian |
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| Written by rubin |
| Sunday, 21 June 2009 05:35 |
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Beauty on the Beach, which presents swimsuits from the early twentieth century to today, engages the viewer to explore how swimwear design and marketing shape and reflect popular ideas about fitness, beauty, and glamour. The exhibition also features original illustration art, advertising, postcards, and promotional materials from The Wolfsonian–FIU collection and other private collections, including rare items from the Jantzen archive in Portland, Oregon. Among the themes addressed in the exhibition are the swimwear industry’s use of new materials, such as the U.S. Rubber Company’s Lastex yarns, the changing strategies used by advertisers to sell swimwear, from clever advertising slogans and the promotion of beach resorts including Miami Beach and Atlantic City with images of glamorous, swimsuit-clad women to celebrity endorsements. Swimsuits worn by celebrities such as the Olympic swimmer and film star Johnny Weissmuller, Marilyn Monroe, Janet Leigh, and Princess Diana will also be on display. “During the
early years of the twentieth century,” Marianne Lamonaca explains, “the number
of people living in cities increased, personal wealth rose, the marketplace
expanded and travel and tourism flourished. In response to these changes in
culture and society, swimwear designers created new styles and advertisers
developed new marketing strategies that reflected attitudes about the health
benefits of bathing (for both hygiene and fitness) and the exposure of the body,
especially the female body, as well as advances in manufacturing techniques and
materials.” The exhibition also traces the history of swimwear design from the early twentieth century to the present with an emphasis on the interrelationship between changing cultural and social mores about the body, health, and beauty, and changing strategies for advertising. One stellar example is Jantzen’s International Set, a fashion line inspired by vernacular designs from across the globe produced between 1956 and 1959. The development of the International Set corresponds to the new-found accessibility to exotic places made possible through commercial jet travel. A number of these elegant swimsuits will be on view along with their supporting promotional materials to address issues of design inspiration and marketing. The Colombia-inspired Cartagena suit is embellished with fine Spanish lace. The Varadero sheath, named for Cuba’s famed beach, is made from Helanca (a highly elastic yarn) that clings tightly to the body revealing the model’s voluptuous contours. The powerful black and white promotional photographs for the International Set also reveal how carefully crafted images were used to promote commercial sales. The Wolfsonian commissioned New York-based photographer Miles Ladin to create a contemporary portrait of Miami Beach bathing culture to complement the historical images on view in Beauty on the Beach. In the installation, wryly titled Sun Stroke Stimulus, Ladin sees in this series of photographs “both the raw beauty found in bathing culture as well as the aspirational desires presented in the display of flesh. Sun, surf, fabric stretched against a buttocks, cleavage, and biceps are all tactile elements that give our eyes pleasure. The acquisition of the tan, the physique, the lifestyle, is all meant to entice the viewer to desire what they see.” Ladin has created two limited-edition artist’s books—Lunch Poems and That Various Field: A Salute to James Schulyer. Noted for his critical view of everyday life, Ladin’s work is included in the collections of The Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the Special Collection Library of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; and the Special Collection Library at The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Beauty on the Beach: A Centennial Celebration of Swimwear and Sun Stroke Stimulus are made possible thanks to support from André Balazs. The Wolfsonian–FIU also gratefully acknowledges the generosity of Jantzen Apparel, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Perry Ellis International, Inc., for providing access to and loans from the Jantzen archives. Visit : www.wolfsonian.org/ Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |
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“During the
early years of the twentieth century,” Marianne Lamonaca explains, “the number
of people living in cities increased, personal wealth rose, the marketplace
expanded and travel and tourism flourished. In response to these changes in
culture and society, swimwear designers created new styles and advertisers
developed new marketing strategies that reflected attitudes about the health
benefits of bathing (for both hygiene and fitness) and the exposure of the body,
especially the female body, as well as advances in manufacturing techniques and
materials.” 
