• hace 8 meses
The Metropolitan Museum in New York is celebrating American femininity with a new exhibition. Entitled 'The American Woman: Fashioning a National Identity', the exhibit helps interpret what American women have been saying about themselves, without saying a word.

The exhibition explores developing perceptions of the modern American woman from the 1890s to the 1940s, and how those perceptions affect the way American women are seen today.

Women's fashion is divided into six archetypes, with each in its own gallery. They represent the Heiress, the Gibson Girl, the Bohemian, the Suffragette/Patriot, the Flapper, and the Screen Siren.

Ahead of the opening, Andrew Bolton, Curator of The Costume Institute explained the importance of each gallery.

Andrew Bolton, curator of The Costume Institute, said, "The last gallery, in a way, takes out these ideas or characteristics embodied by these archetypes, and locates them in specific American women."

Focusing on archetypes of American femininity through fashion, the exhibition will reveal how American women initiated style revolutions that mirrored their social, political, and sexual emancipation.

Early mass-media representations of American women established the fundamental characteristics of American style, a theme that will be explored via a multimedia installation in the final gallery.

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