Parachute jackets and bandage skirts: fashion in communist Poland on view at the National Museum in Krakow
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, September 29, 2024


Parachute jackets and bandage skirts: fashion in communist Poland on view at the National Museum in Krakow
This picture taken on March 16, 2016 shows the exhibition "FASHION able in Communist Poland" which presents Polish fashion in the time of communism in at the National Museum in Krakow. BARTOSZ SIEDLIK / AFP.

By: Anna Maria Jakubek



KRAKOW (AFP).- An elegant former hotel employee remembers dyeing gauze bandages and turning them into ruffled skirts to remain fashionable despite chronic shortages in communist-era Poland. 

"It was a major challenge; to make something that was impossible to get your hands on otherwise," recalled Iwona Koczwanska who groaned when asked her age.

"We had to be creative. I remember once sewing myself a lovely summer dress out of a duvet cover," she told AFP at the "FASHIONable in Communist Poland" exhibition at the National Museum in Krakow.

Dressed in a leopard-print hat, beige turtleneck and long brown skirt with tassels, Koczwanska reminisced while watching old fashion reels projected onto a gallery wall.

"Look how drab the women are. That's how it was. Mostly drab women. All alike, in brown, navy blue, grey, grey, grey," she said of footage that showed women queueing before empty shelves at a shop.

Inventiveness was a must for looking good in Poland's communist decades from 1944 to 1989 faced with the limitations of a planned economy.

"This exhibition is largely about a time when to participate in fashion, cultural capital mattered more than financial capital," said Malgorzata Mozdzynska-Nawotka, one of the curators who had been mulling the idea for this exhibit for years.

Fashion under communism reflected the impact of the system on social reality -- showing the resourcefulness of Poles now on display in Krakow.

Recycled fashion
In the immediate post-World War II period, with the economy in ruins and privation everywhere, it was the reign of recycled fashion.

Examples in the exhibition include a Girl Scout jacket made out of a parachute and a blouse sewn out of one of the silk maps carried by World War II airmen for when they were shot down over enemy territory.

By the time Christian Dior's cinched, full-skirted New Look debuted in the West in 1947, the situation in Soviet-controlled Poland had worsened.

"The Stalinist period was a period of repression, a period when communist ideology was heavily enforced, when there was censorship and no shows of sympathy with the West were allowed," co-curator Joanna Regina Kowalska said.

The regime highlighted the values of a worker or peasant, stressing that daily wear should be comfortable and practical. Aspiring to a higher echelon was a no-no. 

Dior's "New Look" still managed to seep into Polish fashion, though toned down.

The exaggerated lines were softened in the copy-cat items because Poles had little access to the right materials or necessary tools to give a skirt its proper form.

Coat gangs
The confrontation between the desired and the feasible under communism could be seen in the popular mid-1960s raincoat made of a polyamide fabric called ortalion.

"The desire was for an Italian ortalion coat, which hung nicely and didn't rustle. But the available alternative was a Polish ortalion coat, which was a lot stiffer and gave off a very distinctive sound," said Mozdzynska-Nawotka. 

"The Western originals were so sought after that there were these gangs in Poland who would switch out the originals for coats of domestic production at restaurants."

This scam even inspired the 1968 short comedy "Ortalionowy Dziadek" or "Ortalion Grandpa" about a charming old man who supplements his pension by swapping out coats only to get caught by the intrepid militia. 

A popular accessory at the time was the mesh bag, nicknamed Anuzka for the phrase in Polish that means "What if I buy something"?

'Whatever they had, you bought'
"Even an elegantly dressed woman could fit a mesh bag in her purse, so if a store happened to get merchandise that day, you could queue up and you were ready," said Kowalska.

"Which is typical of the communist era. You didn't go out to buy anything in particular, you just went to the stores. And whatever they had, you bought it."

Store shelves were literally bare by the 1980s, when Poland was in deep political, social and economic crisis and a pair of Western jeans could cost an entire month's salary. 

This brought back the kind of DIY creativity that saw Poles dye cotton diapers and turn them into colourful skirts or make tennis wristbands out of sock cuffs.

Fashion under communism was also an outlet for blowing off steam, said Kazimierz Bujak, a 66-year-old university lecturer visiting the exhibition, which moves to the National Museum in Wroclaw in May.

"At the very beginning, in the 1950s and 60s, the regime tried to gain some control over how people dressed, but then fashion became a kind of safety valve," he told AFP. 

It was also a status symbol, whereas today he says what matters more is the car you drive or the house you own.

"Soon it'll be like it is in the US," said Bujak. 

"Who do you find at stores for millionaires on Fifth Avenue but a guy in a stretched out T-shirt, distressed jeans and tattered sneakers, right?

"He has so much money he no longer needs to show he's better than others... we're heading in that direction."



© 1994-2016 Agence France-Presse










Today's News

March 24, 2016

Museum Prinsenhof Delft brings Vermeer's 'The Little Street' back to Delft

Major works from Tate and Centre Pompidou on view at MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst

Trustees of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco select Max Hollein as Director

Masterpiece by Francis Bacon leads Christie's sale of the Marcie-Rivière collection

Nationally recognized Mummies of the World: The Exhibition will make its debut at the Bowers Museum

J. Paul Getty Trust announces J. Paul Getty Medal to go to Yo-Yo Ma and Ellsworth Kelly

"We're Off Then: Travel Pictures from Albrecht Dürer to Olafur Eliasson" on view at the Kupferstichkabinett

New York's World Trade Center defends Belgian tribute; Confusion that lights looked wrong

Metallica's "Master of Puppets" first metal recording in United States historical registry

Russian President Vladimir Putin's wax figure introduced in Serbia's wax museum

Major survey of contemporary artworks by Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander artists opens in Monaco

Parachute jackets and bandage skirts: fashion in communist Poland on view at the National Museum in Krakow

Next artist shortlist for the BMW Art Journey announced during Art Basel in Hong Kong

Joan Goldberg joins Heritage Auctions as Director - Florida

Jenny Hutchinson hired as Head Museum Educator at The Hyde

Korean artist Park Seo-Bo opens his third exhibition at Galerie Perrotin

Art Basel Cities: Art Basel launches new initiative

A carnival of colour: Spectacular collection of Indian miniatures to be offered at Bonhams

Exhibition of new photographs by Sharon Core opens at Yancey Richardson Gallery

Jonas Mekas in person for Walden screening

Art preserves history Loch Ryan's Second World War flying boats

First solo gallery exhibition of the ink painter Li Huayi in Hong Kong opens at Kwai Fung Hin Art Gallery

"Wasteland. New Art from Los Angeles" on view at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful