A Unique Chapter In New Zealand’s Fashion History
MEDIA RELEASE
A Unique Chapter In New
Zealand’s Fashion History, New Zealand In
Vogue
New Zealand in Vogue explores an influential decade of New Zealand’s fashion history when New Zealand had its own Vogue magazine. Featuring in the Eyelights Gallery on Level 4, and opening on 24 June 2011, the exhibition is inspired directly by the pages of Vogue New Zealand. Admission is free.
New Zealand in Vogue will provide a snapshot of the New Zealand fashion scene from 1957 to 1968. British Vogue, the world's most glamorous fashion magazine, established Vogue New Zealand in 1957. Perhaps surprisingly, the New Zealand Vogue was the first Vogue to be established outside of the United States of America and Europe.
Drawing on Te Papa’s fashion
collection, this exhibition is also based on research by
Claire Regnault (Senior Curator History, Te Papa) for the
The Dress Circle (2010), a fashion history
which she co-authored with Lucy Hammonds and Douglas Lloyd
Jenkins.
The exhibition explores the impact of the
magazine and the shape of the fashion industry in New
Zealand by showcasing garments from top New Zealand
designers, and those that were made here under licence from
the world's leading fashion houses, such as Christian Dior.
As well as stylish suits and dresses reflecting the latest
international trends, there are the accessories, essential
to the well-dressed woman. Even the Vogue pattern
home sewer is not left out.
New Zealand in
Vogue
Eyelights, Level 4. Te Papa
24 June
2011 – September
2012
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