American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity - A MUST SEE EVENT

American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity is the first Costume Institute exhibition drawn from the newly established Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at the Met. It explores developing perceptions of the modern American woman from 1890 to 1940 and how they have affected the way American women are seen today. Focusing on archetypes of American femininity through dress, the exhibition reveals how the American woman initiated style revolutions that mirrored her social, political, and sexual emancipation. “Gibson Girls,” “Bohemians,” and “Screen Sirens,” among others, helped lay the foundation for today’s American woman.
The fancy displays are more than a piece of American history. They are a lesson for young American women of all ethnic backgrounds. A lesson that teaches respect, tolerance, wisdom and shows how much our grandmothers and great grandmothers had to struggle to vote, wear pants, smoke cigarettes, work meaningful jobs and raise children in the meantime!!! This exhibit is a display of fascinating historical metamorphosis as well as an inspiration for the future generations to understand the struggle of women form a political and sociological perspective. I’d also hope that to those of you who go see it, it will be an opportunity to think about your own womanhood… What’s a modern woman like to you? How much has changed and how much has stayed the same…?


