Goddess: The Classical Mode

Koda, Harold
2003
224 pages
113 illustrations
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Goddess: The Classical Mode explores the continually evolving influence of ancient Greco-Roman dress through the ages. Over the past two-and-a-half millennia, the classical mode has unfolded and persisted, finding expression in a variety of artworks and through them, in fashion. Through diverse permutations and transformations, ancient dress has survived and resonated as an ideal. This beautifully illustrated volume presents a survey of this fascinating theme, including examples of ancient sculptures and vases, along with works of art and fashions from various historical periods.

Artists and designers have looked to the three major types of classical dress—the chiton, peplos, and himation—and have incorporated from Greco-Roman sources attributes such as the laurel and breastplate as well as various details, notably the Greek-key motif that is familiar as an architectural element from ancient Greek times to recent revivals.

Because no ancient dress survives in cloth, Greek and Roman sculptures and vases, reinforced by literary sources of the period, provide the only evidence of their characteristics. this book is arranged in four sections, in which examples of antique art depicting each type of dress are followed by fashions showing subsequent connections and variations that have occurred on the metamorphosis from marble and clay to fabric. They demonstrate that in the process of assimilation and transformation, some of these interpretations have been subtle, and others more radical.

Fashions inspired by the classical ideal can be elegant, romantic or provocative—reminders of Venus, goddess of love, of Diana, goddess of the hunt, or of the martial ancient tribe of women called Amazons. Most are in pale tones of white or beige, the result of the bleaching out of ancient, originally polychromed marbles that has occurred over many centuries.

The emphasis is on the continuing presence of the classical mode in the fashion of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Full-page illustrations with accompanying texts portray and discuss important and innovative works by such designers as Paul Poiret and Mariano Fortuny; the emblematic draped creations of Madame Grès; costumes created for performances by the innovator of modern dance Isadora Duncan; the deconstructed peplos-style gown of Yves Saint Laurent; and the formidable recent contributions of Gianni Versace, Romeo Gigli, Alexander McQueen, and Tom Ford of Gucci. Each has made unique imaginative contributions that carry the immortal ideal originating from the goddesses of ancient Greece and Rome to the present and enliven it for the future.

Inspired by the classical mode, Harold Koda, Curator in Charge of The Costume Institute, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, has conceived and developed this entertaining volume. It accompanies a major exhibition on view during the spring-summer of 2003 at The Costume Institute. Looking back 2,500 years to the time when Greek gods and goddesses reigned on Mount Olympus, this project continues the ongoing mission of The Costume Institute to document and examine diverse aspects of fashion's history and fashion's march into the twenty-first century.

Met Art in Publication

Terracotta lekythos (oil flask), Amasis Painter, Terracotta, Greek, Attic
Amasis Painter
ca. 550–530 BCE
Terracotta bell-krater (bowl for mixing wine and water), Persephone Painter, Terracotta, Greek, Attic
Persephone Painter
ca. 440 BCE
Marble statue of Eirene (the personification of peace), Kephisodotos, Marble, Pentelic ?, Roman
Kephisodotos
ca. 14–68 CE
Evening dress, Paul Poiret  French, silk, French
Paul Poiret
1922–23
Victory, Augustus Saint-Gaudens  American, Bronze, gilt, American
Augustus Saint-Gaudens
1892–1903; this cast, 1914 or after (by 1916)
George Platt Lynes
1940
Marble funerary statues of a maiden and a little girl, Marble, Pentelic, Greek, Attic
ca. 320 BCE
Dress, Raymond Duncan  American, silk, American
Raymond Duncan
1920s
"Delphos", Fortuny  Italian, (a) Silk, glass; (b, c) silk, Italian
Fortuny
1925–49
Evening dress, Madame Grès (Germaine Émilie Krebs)  French, silk, French
Madame Grès (Germaine Émilie Krebs)
1978
Bronze statuette of a veiled and masked dancer, Bronze, Greek
3rd–2nd century BCE
Ensemble, Halston  American, silk, American
Halston
1974
Evening ensemble, Madame Grès (Germaine Émilie Krebs)  French, silk, French
Madame Grès (Germaine Émilie Krebs)
1967–85
Evening dress, Madame Grès (Germaine Émilie Krebs)  French, silk, French
Madame Grès (Germaine Émilie Krebs)
ca. 1965
The Pleiades, Elihu Vedder  American, Oil on canvas, American
Elihu Vedder
1885
Marble statue of a woman, Marble, Greek
2nd half of the 4th century BCE
Madame Charles Maurice de Talleyrand Périgord (1761–1835), baron François Gérard  French, Oil on canvas
baron François Gérard
ca. 1804
Evening dress, cotton, French
1804–5
Dress, cotton, French
1804–14
Marble statue of a wounded Amazon, Marble, Roman
1st–2nd century CE
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