Model No. 256

Steven Arpad  (French, 1904–1999)

Date:
1939
Culture:
French
Medium:
leather, wood
Dimensions:
5 x 8 1/2 in. (12.7 x 21.6 cm)
Credit Line:
Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Arpad 1947, 1947
Accession Number:
2009.300.1127
  • Description

    This object comes from a group of over seventy-five shoe prototypes designed in Paris in 1939 by Steven Arpad. Aside from the lines of leather accessories and jewelry he produced under his own name in the 1940s, Arpad seems to have worked mostly anonymously. The prototypes are accompanied by an extensive archive of original sketches which has made it possible to identify uncredited shoe designs for Balenciaga and Delman as Arpad's work. Containing some of the most creative, unique, and unusual examples of footwear design in the collection, the museum's holdings appear to be the only documented body of the work of this extraordinary designer.
    A fantasy heel is counterbalanced in this design by the classic pump style of the upper. In a thoughtful twist, Arpad has used of haired leather to coordinate thematically with ram's head.

  • Signatures, Inscriptions, and Markings

    Marking: Stamped: "Douanes/Le Havre" Inscribed: "256" Inscribed: "378" Inscribed: "Create a new use by an extreme form/Not for Sale"

  • See also
    Who
    What
    Where
    When
    In the Museum
    Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
80093663

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