Monica D. Murgia

Where art, creativity, and fashion meet
January 18th, 2013

Fortuny: An Artist That Paints Textiles

One of my New Year’s Resolutions was to visit a new place every month this year.  I love traveling, and have a few distant and exotic destinations on the list.  But adventure doesn’t  always have to be reserved to foreign locales.  In fact, I always make it a point to live each day as if I was charting undiscovered territory.  

That’s one of the many reasons I love New York so much.  Every step I take in this city is filled with discovery, beauty, and adventure.  Yesterday, I ventured over to the Queen Sofia Spanish Institute to see the exhibition on Fortuny.

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Mariano Fortuny y Madrazo (1871 – 1949) was a Spanish artist and designer.  He was one of the leaders in liberating women from the corset during the 1910s.  Fortuny was a real Renaissance man and loved to learn.  He collected and read ancient manuscripts and rediscovered an ancient way of pleating fabrics.  He started to use this pleating to make gowns inspired by ancient Greek sculptures.

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I’d learned a bit about this famous designer in school, and was thrilled to have the opportunity to attend this exhibit.  Curated by Oscar de la Renta, I knew the show would be a real treat.  I was not disappointed.  A majority of the collection was on loan from private collectors, including Vintage Luxury.  I really encourage everyone to see this before it closes on March 30th, because the pictures do not even begin to do the actual garments justice.

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There was so much about Fortuny that I didn’t know.  He was a descendent of the Madrazo family, which consisted of artists, curators, and  collectors.  Art was an intregral part of life for the Madrazo clan, and it deeply influenced Fortuny’s creativity.

Fortuny himself declared, “I have always had many interests, but I have always considered painting to be my profession.

He painted beautiful portraits, experimented heavily with photography, and collected art and objects himself.  This paved the way for him to design textiles and design garments.

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In 1906, Fortuny designed costumes for the Ballet for the Countess Bearn’s theater opening .  The dancers wore his Knossos dresses, which were seen publicly for the first time.  He then began producing dresses that referenced classical Greek sculptures, like the Delphos dress, in 1907.   Fortuny kept his masterful pleating a trade secret, and was able to obtain a patent for the design in 1909.  These dresses were stored by coiling them in a small box.  When the pleates disappeared from wear, the dress would get sent back to Fortuny’s atelier for re-pleating.

 

 

 

 

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The influence of Greek sculpture is pretty obvious.  Yet Fortuny loved to travel and incoporated influences from various cultures into single ensembles or dresses.  Exotic, orientalist themes are present, like kimono sleeves.  His North African travels were always focused around documenting customs related to dress and photography. Fortuny also painted designs onto voided velvet scarves, which were then draped over his dresses to look like Indian saris.

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Fortuny was originaly from Granada, Spain.  He moved to Venice, where he operated his business.  The Plazzo Orfei the location of the main workshops.  He also had smaller textile printing locations on the nearby island of Giudecca.  Italian influences are also scene in his garments, like the beautiful drawstring closures and embelishments trimmed with Venetian glass beads.

 

 

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He also created textile patterns based on traditional Italian paintings.  These prints included were on cotton and velvets.  Many of the designs, like the melagrana design, are still available from the Fortuny company.

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The operations soon expanded to paper and paints under the name Societa Anonima Fortuny.  The gorgeous logo (below) was taken from sketchbook for Jacopo Bellini a 15th century Venetian painter that also designed textiles.

 

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The clothes really speak for themselves, but gained a lot of attention in their heyday as well.  Vogue stated in 1912 that Fortuny was  ”an artist who paints fabrics” and in 1923  ”a great artist, with exquisite textiles as his medium”.  I couldn’t agree more!

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All images are courtesy of The Queen Sofia Spanish Institute.  The exhibit Fortuny Y Madrazo: An Artistic Legacy runs until March 30th, 2013.

GHTime Code(s): nc 

September 27th, 2011

Tuesdays are for Textiles

Mondays are always pretty glum.  The weekend is over, and it’s back to work.  Wednesday has been dubbed “hump day” as it signifies the the half-way mark to some much needed time off.  But there is another, perhaps lesser-known, way to fight the work-week blues: Textile Tuesday.

Black satin purse, almost entirely covered with silk embroidery, Oriental, early 20th century. Image courtesy of charlestonmuseum.tumblr.com

 

 

Each Tuesday, the Charleston Museum posts a piece from their textile collection.  Some items have been on exhibit, some will eventually be shown, and some others will never be displayed publicly because they are too fragile to display.  The beautiful tumblr blog displays pages of archived Tuesday treasures, some of which I’ve featured below.  In case your Tuesdays are as manic as your Mondays, follow the Charleston Museum on Twitter, or look for #textiletuesday.

Mint green rayon dress c. 1925-1929, worn by Jeanette W. Rubin. Image courtesy of charlestonmuseum.tumblr.com

Bronze leather shoes with cutwork and embroidery and a large silk rosette, mid 19th century. Image courtesy of charlestonmuseum.tumblr.com

Black crepe dress, ornamented with silver sequins, glass beads and rhinestones. Made by François Bacus, Lunéville, France. Image courtesy of charlestonmuseum.tumblr.com

Ivory satin dress, 1921, with silk embroidered vine and tiny faux pearl “grapes.” Image courtesy of charlestonmuseum.tumblr.com

Pleated silk Delphos dress, early 20th century. Mariano Fortuny (1871-1949). Image courtesy of charlestonmuseum.tumblr.com

Light blue satin shoes with silver braid, c. 1770. The label inside one shoe indicates that these were made in London by Thos. Hose, Shoemaker, Lombard Street. Image courtesy of charlestonmuseum.tumblr.com

The workweek just got a little bit easier . . .

GHTime Code(s): nc nc nc nc 

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