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Wearable art, also known as Artwear or "art to wear", refers to art pieces in the shape of clothing or jewellery pieces. These pieces are usually handmade, and are produced only once or as a very limited series. Pieces of clothing are often made with fibrous materials and traditional techniques such as crochet, knitting, quilting, but may also include plastic sheeting, metals, paper, and more. While the making of any article of clothing or other wearable object typically involves aesthetic considerations, the term ''wearable art'' implies that the work is intended to be accepted as an artistic creation or statement. Wearable art is meant to draw attention while it is being displayed, modeled or used in
performance A performance is an act of staging or presenting a play, concert, or other form of entertainment. It is also defined as the action or process of carrying out or accomplishing an action, task, or function. Management science In the work place ...
s. Pieces may be sold and exhibited. Wearable art sits at the crossroads of craft, fashion and art. The modern idea of wearable art seems to have surfaced more than once in various forms. Jewellery historians identify a wearable art movement spanning roughly the years 1930 to 1960. Textile and costume historians identify wearable art as a heir to the 1850s Arts and Crafts movement, which burgeoned in the 1960s. It grew in importance in the 1970s, fueled by
hippie A hippie, also spelled hippy, especially in British English, is someone associated with the counterculture of the 1960s, originally a youth movement that began in the United States during the mid-1960s and spread to different countries around ...
and
mod Mod, MOD or mods may refer to: Places * Modesto City–County Airport, Stanislaus County, California, US Arts, entertainment, and media Music * Mods (band), a Norwegian rock band * M.O.D. (Method of Destruction), a band from New York City, US ...
subcultures, and alongside craftivism, fiber arts and feminist art. Artists identifying with this movement are overwhelmingly women. In the late 1990s, wearable art becomes difficult to distinguish from fashion, and in the 2000s-2010s begins integrating new materials such as electronics.


History


Origins

The wearable art movements inherits from the Arts and Crafts movements, which sought to integrate art in everyday life and objects. Carefully handmade clothing was considered as a device for self-articulation and furthermore, a strategy to defy large-scale manufacturing. The optimistic start of the movement that considered pieces of clothing to be a type of self-articulation today has developed into a new and fresh style of garments.


In the United States

The term wearable art itself emerged around 1975 to distinguish it from body art, and was used alongside Artwear and "Art to Wear," coined by
Julie Schafler Dale Julie Schafler Dale is a gallerist, curator and craft historian known for supporting the American Art to Wear or art-as-fashion movement. Biography Schafler founded ''Julie: Artisans' Gallery'' on Madison Avenue in New York in 1973, in respons ...
. In the United States, the wearable art movement emerges from the renewal of crafts education, notably at Cranbrook Academy of Art and the Pratt Institute, who introduced teaching on weaving. It was supported by the American Craft Council and the museums of Crafts and Design. The best known galleries were ''Obiko'' in San Francisco, and ''Julie: Artisans' Gallery'' in New York.


Outside the United States

Crafts and art education being more separated outside of the United States, it is harder to identify wearable art as a separate movement. However, renewed interest in traditional textile crafts such as shibori dying sparked the interest of artist worldwide.


Contemporary Wearable Art

Wearable art declines as a separate movement in the late 1990s due to competition from industry, which enabled customization at scale, the migration of artists towards
haute couture ''Haute couture'' (; ; French for 'high sewing', 'high dressmaking') is the creation of exclusive custom-fitted high-end fashion design that is constructed by hand from start-to-finish. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth century, Paris became th ...
or the production of small series, and the broader availability of handcrafted garments from around the world in the Global North. An example is the 2015 Fall couture show Viktor and Rolf, which explored how the shapes of traditional artworks such as frames could become garments.


Mediums and Shapes

Artists creating wearable fiber art may use purchased finished fabrics or other materials, making them into unique garments, or may dye and paint virgin fabric. Countering the belief that art is something expensive, some clothing artists have started local companies to produce quality art work and clothing for a modest price.


Mediums


Fibers

Crochet, embroidery, knitting, lace, quilting and felting are all commonly found in wearable art pieces.


Jewelry

Some 20th-century modern artists and architects sought to elevate bodily ornamentation — that is, jewellery — to the level of fine art and original design, rather than mere decoration, craft production of traditional designs, or conventional settings for showing off expensive stones or precious metals. Jewelry was used by surrealists, cubists, abstract expressionists, and other modernist artists working in the middle decades of the 20th century.


Electronics

As wearable computing technology develops, increasingly miniaturized and stylized equipment is starting to blend with wearable art esthetics. Low-power mobile computing allows light-emitting and color-changing flexible materials and high-tech fabrics to be used in complex and subtle ways. Some practitioners of the
Steampunk Steampunk is a subgenre of science fiction that incorporates retrofuturistic technology and aesthetics inspired by 19th-century industrial steam-powered machinery. Steampunk works are often set in an alternative history of the Victorian era or ...
movement have produced elaborate costumes and accessories which incorporate a pseudo-Victorian style with modern technology and materials.


Shapes

A recurring shape in the Art to Wear movement was the kimono. It enables to rapidly turn a piece of custom fabric into a garment.


Relationship to Fine Arts, Fiber Arts and Performance

Performance A performance is an act of staging or presenting a play, concert, or other form of entertainment. It is also defined as the action or process of carrying out or accomplishing an action, task, or function. Management science In the work place ...
and conceptual artists have sometimes produced examples which are more provocative than useful. Trashion is another branch of extraordinary wearable art, for example, work by
Marina DeBris Marina DeBris is the name used by an Australian-based artist whose work focuses on reusing trash to raise awareness of ocean and beach pollution. DeBris uses trash washed up from the beach to create trashion, 'fish tanks', decorative art and ot ...
. The Portland Oregon Trashion Collective, Junk to Funk, has been using creating outrageous art garments out of trash. A well-known example is the ''Electric Dress'', a ceremonial wedding kimono-like costume consisting mostly of variously colored electrified and painted light bulbs, enmeshed in a tangle of wires, created in 1956 by the Japanese
Gutai The was a Japanese avant-garde artist group founded in the Hanshin region by young artists under the leadership of the painter Jirō Yoshihara in Ashiya, Japan, in 1954. The group, today one of the most internationally-recognized instances o ...
artist Atsuko Tanaka. This extreme garment was something like a stage costume. Not really wearable in an everyday, practical sense, it functioned rather as part of a daring work of performance art (though the "performance" element consisted merely of the artist's wearing the piece while mingling with spectators in a gallery setting). In Nam June Paik's 1969 performance piece called ''TV Bra for Living Sculpture'', Charlotte Moorman played a cello while wearing a brassiere made of two small operating television sets. Canadian artist Andrea Vander Kooij created a group of pieces called ''Garments for Forced Intimacy'' (2006). According to an essay at
Concordia University Concordia University ( French: ''Université Concordia'') is a public research university located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Founded in 1974 following the merger of Loyola College and Sir George Williams University, Concordia is one of the t ...
's Faculty of Fine Arts gallery website, these hand-knit articles of clothing are designed to be worn by two people simultaneously, and they, "as the name states, compel the wearers into uncharacteristic proximity." In Belgium
Racso Jugarap
a wire artist creates wearable pieces using the material that he uses for his sculptures. playing with the malleability of metal wires. Some artists, like
Isamaya Ffrench Isamaya Ffrench (born 9 April 1989) is a British make-up artist and creator of wearable art. She has worked on fashion editorials for several major publications, including ''Vogue'', ''Dazed'', '' W'' magazine and ''Love''. Her subjects have inclu ...
and
Damselfrau Magnhild Kennedy (born 1978 in Trondheim, Norway), better known professionally as Damselfrau, is a London-based Norwegian artist. She creates wearable art, mostly masks and jewellery. Her masks are presented on her own Instagram account and on seve ...
, create experimental masks as wearable art, using materials from Lego bricks (Ffrench); plastic trinkets, antique hear wreaths and old laces (Damselfrau).


Major exhibitions, events and organizations


Exhibitions

* The Museum of Arts and Design has hosted exhibitions related to Wearable art since 1965 * Art for Wearing, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art * Art to Wear, 1987, Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland * Artwear: Fashion and Anti-fashion,
De Young Memorial Museum The de Young Museum, formally the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, is a fine arts museum located in San Francisco, California. Located in Golden Gate Park, it is a component of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, along with the Legion of Honor ...
in San Francisco * Off the Wall: American Art to Wear, 2019-2020, Philadephia Museum of Art


Events

* World of Wearabe Art Awards, held annually since 1987 and run by
Suzie Moncrieff Dame Suzie Moncrieff (born Suzanne Elizabeth Dick, ) is a New Zealand sculptor and arts entrepreneur, and the founder of the World of Wearable Art show (WOW). Early life Moncrieff was born in 1948 or 1949, at Hope, near Nelson, New Zealand, ...
.


Organizations

* Fiberworks Art Center for Textile Arts, founded in 1973, closed 1987 in Berkeley * World Shibori Network * World Textile Art


See also

* Fashion accessories *
Steampunk Steampunk is a subgenre of science fiction that incorporates retrofuturistic technology and aesthetics inspired by 19th-century industrial steam-powered machinery. Steampunk works are often set in an alternative history of the Victorian era or ...
* Wearable computing


References


External links


World of WearableArt Awards Show
- a renowned international design competition and spectacular, theatrical production held annually in Wellington, New Zealand.
The Wearable Art Awards
- Wearable Art competition held yearly in Port Moody, Canada * Museum of Northwest Artbr>Wearable Art Workshop
by Paul Kuniholm
Wearable Art competition held annually in Alice Springs as part of the Alice Desert FestivalThe Wearable Art italian artist Andrea Valentino Piccinini
- The Wearable Art Italian artist Andrea Valentino Piccinini, Modena Italy. {{Textile arts Visual arts genres Textile arts Trashion Fashion accessories