Vionnet at the Fashion Museum

Museums join forces to save inspirational fashion for the nation

 

Bath & North East Somerset Council’s world-renowned Fashion Museum has acquired two outstanding examples of 1930s haute couture by celebrated Parisian couturier Madeleine Vionnet. 

 

Bath Fashion Museum was one of three UK museums who worked together to save a collection of nine evening dresses by the designer and worn by British socialite Lady Foley.  Because of their high quality and the range of textiles and techniques used, the dresses were classed as unmatched by other examples already in the UK and were subject of a recent Export Licence stop by the Secretary of State.

 

The two dresses acquired by Bath Fashion Museum will be on display from December 2009.  Fashion students will also be able to view them as they are being prepared for exhibition.  

 

Councillor Terry Gazzard, the Council’s Cabinet Member for Tourism, Leisure & Culture (Conservative, Abbey) said: “ Bath and North East Somerset Council’s Fashion Museum is already designated by Government as a regional museum of international importance and these dresses will take their place in its collections alongside work by some of the world’s other top couturiers.”

 

Three museums with nationally important collections of fashion – the V&A Museum, the Bowes Museum and the Fashion Museum in Bath – formed a consortium to raise the funds to buy the dresses.  Supported by the MLA/ V&A Purchase Grant fund and independent charity, The Art Fund, this is the first project of its kind to help to keep a collection of Vionnet dresses in the UK and make them available for public viewing.

 

The two Vionnet dresses for the Fashion Museum in Bath were bought for £101,365, of which The MLA/V&A Purchase Grant Fund gave £50,000 and The Art Fund gave £31,365. The Council, the West of England Costume Society and many private individuals and supporters have also donated towards the purchase.

 

Both dresses are in a fine condition and are excellent illustrations of the couturier’s design legacy: precise cut, delicate construction, and exquisite use of a variety of embroidery and fabric manipulation techniques.

 

The first dress is a full-length evening gown of cream silk tulle with a bodice decorated with intricate smocking. The pattern of the smocking resembles interlocking hexagons which appear to be made up of simple flower motifs with six petals. The dress is dated 1934. The second, dated 1938, is of white cotton organdie and is embroidered in white thread – in what appears to be a tambour stitch – in large single sprig motifs of bouquets of flowers and sheaves of wheat.

 

Stephen Bird, Head of the Council’s Heritage Services which manages the Fashion Museum, said: “The Fashion Museum has a discerning policy of collecting fine examples of quality work, including work by leading couturiers of the last century. We rely heavily on donations and support in kind from generous benefactors but, like any quality museum, we also have a modest acquisitions fund that we use discerningly when we can lever in match funding and grant aid to acquire an exceptional piece.   This is the first such acquisition for the Fashion Museum for nine years.”

 

Janet Davies, Head of the MLA/V&A Purchase Grant Fund said:

“We were delighted to award our largest grant this year to the Fashion Museum which provides a perfect context for these two dresses.  The acquisition of the seven dresses offers a wonderful opportunity for the three museums to work in partnership.”

 

Andrew Macdonald, Acting Director of The Art Fund, said: “These exquisite dresses reveal the astonishing cut and design of Madeleine Vionnet’s haute couture. Her innovative construction techniques and skilled manipulation of fabric have inspired many of today’s leading fashion designers.  Sharing the collection between the three museums is a wonderful way of allowing more people to see Vionnet’s distinctive style as well as the sumptuous tastes of Lady Foley and The Art Fund is thrilled to have helped save them for the nation.”

 

 

ENDS