2018 | Museum of the Moving Image Presents ‘Wearing Time: Past, Present, Future, Dream’

6 – 22 April 2018

New York

Curated by: Marketa Uhlirova and Tom Gunning

Fashion’s most intimate relationship is its relation to time — Barbara Vinken

Fashion, measure of time — Walter Benjamin

The London-based Fashion in Film Festival’s 10th anniversary season explores the fascinating connections between fashion, cinema and time. Probing into four different (though often overlapping) conceptions of time — past, present, future, and dream — the programme asks what concrete manifestations of time fashion and clothing enable. What memories, echoes, and ghostly shadows? Fashion’s own relation to time may be vital and intimate, but it is far from transparent. Film, the art of time passing, helps illuminate some of its complexities.

Few things indicate history to us as immediately as styles of dress — period films are often referred to as costume dramas. At the same time, fashion is one of the most potent visual means through which film can break away from known reality and herald new worlds of tomorrow. But dress and fabric can also embody the passage of time. Fashion in film has always been an important sign-posting device, deployed in multiple ways: to guide the viewer through time, to confuse, deceive, and disorient them, or even to dress the wounds of time. Examining the idea of clothing as a vehicle for representing time, Wearing Time goes beyond this, foregrounding the sense of invoking the past, present and future by donning its clothing. Dress allows us to wear time, even as time wears us out.

 

To visit the Museum of the Moving Image website please click here

The full festival programme can be found here

The press release is here

 

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About the curators:

Tom Gunning is Edwin A. and Betty L. Bergman Distinguished Service Professor of Art History, Cinema and Media Studies, and the College Classics at University of Chicago. He has written extensively on problems of early and silent film, American avant-garde cinema and Hollywood film. He has published two books, The Films of Fritz Lang: Allegories of Vision and Modernity (winner CINEMA & Cie award) and D.W. Griffith and the Origins of American Narrative Film: The Early Years at Biograph, and over one hundred articles, catalogue essays, and book chapters. In 2009 he was the recipient of the Distinguished Achievement Award from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, in recognition of his major contribution to the fields of film history and theory.

Marketa Uhlirova is a Senior Research Fellow in Fashion History and Theory at Central Saint Martins, and co-founder and Director of the Fashion in Film Festival. She is the editor of Fashion in Film’s publications, including If Looks Could Kill: Cinema’s Images of Fashion, Crime and Violence (2008) and Birds of Paradise: Costume as Cinematic Spectacle (2013). She has contributed film programmes and installations to numerous cinema venues and museum exhibitions, and has contributed articles on fashion, cinema and art to journals and magazines, including Fashion TheoryArt Monthly, and Aperture.

 

Panelists and collaborators will include:

Alistair O’Neill is a Professor in Fashion History and Theory at Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design, London. He is the author of London- after a fashion (2007, Reaktion) and contributed to Fashion and Art (2012, Berg) and Incomparable: Women of Style, Rose Hartman (2012, ACC). Alistair is on the Editorial Board of Costume, the journal of the Costume Society of Great Britain and writes for the journals Fashion Theory and Photography and Culture. He contributes to media including The Guardian, The Independent and BBC Radio 4, and lectures at the Victoria and Albert Museum and Tate Britain. He is currently completing Photography and Fashion for Reaktion Books and is a curatorial consultant for Somerset House Embankment Galleries.

Jessamyn Hatcher teaches Fashion Studies and the Humanities in the Global Liberal Studies program at New York University. She is the co-editor, with Thuy Linh Tu and Minh-Ha Pham, of an upcoming volume about fashion and globalisation, and is working on a book called Worn Stories: Materiality, Affect, and the Politics of Fashion.

Francesca Granata is Director of the MA Fashion Studies and Assistant Professor in the School of Art and Design History and Theory at Parsons School of Design. Her research centres on 20th century and contemporary visual and material culture with a particular focus on fashion, gender and performance studies. In 2009 she co-curated Ethics + Aesthetics, an exhibition exploring the interconnection between fashion and sustainability.