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17,340 results for woman dressing woman

Image for The Ideal Woman
editorial

The Ideal Woman

February 17, 2012

By Jamilah

Teen Advisory Group Member Jamilah writes about what the ideal woman looked like during the Renaissance.
Image for A Virtual Tour of _The New Woman Behind the Camera_
The New Woman was a global ideal of female empowerment based on real women making revolutionary changes in life and art.
Image for Women Dressing Women
Past Exhibition

Women Dressing Women

December 7, 2023–March 10, 2024
The Costume Institute's fall 2023 exhibition will explore the creativity and artistic legacy of women fashion designers from The Met’s permanent collection, tracing a lineage of makers from the turn of the twentieth century to the present day by hi…
Image for Pablo Picasso's Standing Woman, 1912
editorial

Pablo Picasso's Standing Woman, 1912

October 22, 2018

By Rachel Mustalish

A conservator describes the techniques Picasso used to create his ink and charcoal drawing, _Standing Woman_ (1912).
Image for The Eighteenth-Century Woman
The hallmarks of the eighteenth century—its opulence, charm, wit, intelligence—are embodied in the age's remarkable women. These women held sway in the salons, in the councils of state, in the ballrooms, in the bedrooms; they enchanted (or intimidated) the most powerful of men and presided over an extraordinary cultural flowering of unprecedented luxury and sophistication. It is this captivating world that Olivier Bernier recreates. A world in which the shrewdness of Madame de Pompadour or the beauty of Madame du Barry could change the course of great nations. A world that could encompass the piquant frankness of Abigail Adams and the dark plotting of the queen of Naples. This world has been swept away, but its great ladies, the first modern women, still speak to us. Fourteen dashing and sometimes tragic women—empress and dressmaker, bluestocking and courtesan—come to life here in a series of lavishly illustrated essays. Delightfully informative, this timely book charts the beginnings of women's liberation, illuminates the century for those who are unfamiliar with it, and provides new insights for those who know it well.
Image for Curator Interview: *American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity*
editorial

Curator Interview: American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity

August 5, 2010

By Jennette Mullaney

Among the gorgeous garments on display in the exhibition American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity (closing August 15) is an exquisite black evening dress attributed to Madame Marie Gerber of the house of Callot Soeurs. I spoke with Andrew Bolton, curator in the Met's Costume Institute, about the dress's bold design and glamorous, influential owner.
Image for Three Final Weeks for the Exhibitions *Picasso* and *American Woman*
Summer visitors to the Met have only three more weeks—through Sunday, August 15—to view the popular exhibitions Picasso in The Metropolitan Museum of Art and American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity.
Image for Women in Classical Greece
Essay

Women in Classical Greece

October 1, 2004

By Colette Hemingway

In addition to childbearing, the weaving of fabric and managing the household were the principal responsibilities of a Greek woman. Young women, however, had some mobility in antiquity.
Image for Women Dressing Women: A Lineage of Female Fashion Design
This beautifully illustrated book explores the considerable impact of fashions created by and for women by tracing a historical and conceptual lineage of female designers—from unidentified dressmakers in eighteenth-century France to contemporary makers who are leading the direction of fashion today. Stunning new photographs of exceptional garments from the unparalleled collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute complement insightful essays that consider notions of anonymity, visibility, agency, and absence/ omission, highlighting celebrated designers and forgotten histories alike to reveal women’s impact on the field of fashion. The publication includes garments from French houses such as Vionnet, Schiaparelli, and Mad Carpentier to American makers like Ann Lowe, Claire McCardell, and Isabel Toledo, along with contemporary designers such as Rei Kawakubo, Iris van Herpen, Simone Rocha, and Anifa Mvuemba. Situating the works within a larger social context, this overdue look at female-led design is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of fashion.
Image for Woman
Art

Woman

Willem de Kooning (American (born The Netherlands), Rotterdam 1904–1997 East Hampton, New York)

Date: 1944
Accession Number: 1984.613.2

Image for Woman
Art

Woman

Royal Porcelain Manufactory, Naples (Ferdinand IV period, ca. 1771–ca. 1807)

Date: ca. 1785–95
Accession Number: 1982.60.281

Image for Dressing

John Koch (American, Toledo, Ohio 1909–1978 New York)

Date: 1956
Accession Number: 57.77

Image for Terracotta lekythos (oil flask)

Attributed to the Woman Painter

Date: ca. 420–400 BCE
Accession Number: 06.1169

Image for Woman
Art

Woman

Man Ray (American, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1890–1976 Paris)

Date: 1918
Accession Number: 2005.100.206

Image for Woman
Art

Woman

Willem de Kooning (American (born The Netherlands), Rotterdam 1904–1997 East Hampton, New York)

Date: ca. 1952
Accession Number: 1984.613.6

Image for Woman
Art

Woman

Unidentified

Date: 1920s–1930s
Accession Number: VRA.2014.8.035

Image for Woman
Art

Woman

Joan Miró (Spanish, Barcelona 1893–1983 Palma de Mallorca)

Date: 1934
Accession Number: 2007.247.5

Image for Woman
Art

Woman

Willem de Kooning (American (born The Netherlands), Rotterdam 1904–1997 East Hampton, New York)

Date: 1966
Accession Number: 1975.189.6

Image for Woman
Art

Woman

Harold Anchel (American, 1912–1980)

Date: 1935–43
Accession Number: 43.33.754