NEW YORK, NY.- The spring 2011 exhibition organized by The Costume Institute of
The Metropolitan Museum of Art will be Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty, it was announced by the Museum today. The exhibition, on view from May 4 through July 31, 2011 (preceded on May 2 by The Costume Institute Gala Benefit), will celebrate the late Mr. McQueens extraordinary contributions to fashion. From his Central Saint Martins postgraduate collection in 1992 to his final runway presentation, which took place after his death in February 2010, Mr. McQueen challenged and expanded our understanding of fashion beyond utility to a conceptual expression of culture, politics, and identity.
Alexander McQueens iconic designs constitute the work of an artist whose medium of expression was fashion, said Thomas P. Campbell, Director of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. This landmark exhibition continues the Museums tradition of celebrating designers who changed the course of history and culture by creating new possibilities.
To celebrate the opening of the exhibition, the Museum's Costume Institute Benefit will take place on Monday, May 2, 2011. The evenings Honorary Chairs are François-Henri Pinault and Salma Hayek, and the Co-Chairs will be Colin Firth, Stella McCartney, and Anna Wintour, Editor-in-Chief of Vogue. This fundraising event is The Costume Institutes main source of annual funding for exhibitions, acquisitions, and capital improvements.
Alexander McQueen was best known for his astonishing and extravagant runway presentations, which were given dramatic scenarios and narrative structures that suggested avant-garde installation and performance art, said Andrew Bolton, Curator of The Costume Institute. His fashions were an outlet for his emotions, an expression of the deepest, often darkest, aspects of his imagination. He was a true romantic in the Byronic sense of the word -- he channeled the sublime.
The exhibition, in the Metropolitan Museums second-floor Cantor Galleries, will feature approximately 100 examples of Mr. McQueens work from his prolific 19- year career. Drawn primarily from the Alexander McQueen Archive in London, with some pieces from the Givenchy Archive in Paris as well as private collections, signature designs including the bumster trouser, the kimono jacket, and the Origami frock coat will be on view. McQueens fashions often referenced the exaggerated silhouettes of the 1860s, 1880s, 1890s, and 1950s, but his technical ingenuity always imbued his designs with an innovative sensibility that kept him at the vanguard.
Galleries will showcase recurring themes and concepts in McQueens work beginning with The Savage Mind which will examine his subversion of traditional tailoring and dressmaking practices through displacement and deconstruction. Romantic Gothic will highlight McQueens narrative approach to fashion and illuminate his engagement with Romantic literary traditions such as death, decay, and darkness. It will also reveal the main characters of his collections, including femme fatales and anti-heroes such as pirates and highwaymen. Romantic Nationalism will look at McQueens fascination with the distant past, while Romantic Exoticism will examine his focus on distant places. Romantic Primitivism will explore McQueens engagement with the ideal of the noble savage.
Five of McQueens landmark collections that explore his engagement with the Romantic sublime and the dialectics of beauty and horror will be interspersed among the galleries -- Dante (autumn/winter 1996-97), Number 13 (spring/ summer 1999), Voss (spring/summer 2001), Irere (spring/summer 2003), and Platos Atlantis (spring/summer 2010). Cabinet of Curiosities will include various atavistic and fetishized objects often produced with milliner Philip Treacy and jeweler Shaun Leane, longtime collaborators of McQueens. A separate screening room will display videos of McQueens renowned runway presentations.