Fashion City or Museum of Fashion? Exploring the Mutually Beneficial Relationship between London’s Fashion Industry and Fashion Exhibitions at the Victoria and Albert Museum
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引用次数: 3
Abstract
As the commodity chains supporting the fashion industry have become ever more global and complex, so the work of constructing and maintaining the reputations of fashion cities such as London has also needed to evolve. Museums have played a key role in this process through their dissemination of discursive narratives about the places, spaces, and people that constitute London’s symbolic fashion capital. Taking the Victoria and Albert Museum as a primary case study, this paper explores how changes to the networks and processes of the fashion city in the decades following the Second World War were connected to the growth of fashion within the museum. Looking at two key exhibitions: Britain Can Make It (1946) and Fashion: An Anthology (1971), it traces how the museum responded to processes of deindustrialization and cultural change by bringing the city’s commercial fashion cultures into the museum space, resulting in the museum becoming an important site for the fashion city. Finally, it asks whether the legacy of this process has resulted in increasingly narrow and homogenous fashion exhibitions that have the potential to harm London’s fashionable reputation by excluding many of the diverse networks and places that make the city’s fashion culture unique.
随着支持时尚产业的商品链变得越来越全球化和复杂,建立和维护伦敦等时尚城市声誉的工作也需要发展。博物馆在这一过程中发挥了关键作用,通过它们传播关于构成伦敦象征性时尚之都的地点、空间和人物的话语叙事。本文以维多利亚和阿尔伯特博物馆为主要案例研究,探讨了二战后几十年时尚之城的网络和过程的变化如何与博物馆内时尚的发展联系在一起。通过两个重要的展览:Britain Can Make It(1946)和Fashion: An Anthology(1971),追溯了博物馆如何通过将城市的商业时尚文化带入博物馆空间来应对去工业化和文化变革的过程,从而使博物馆成为时尚城市的重要场所。最后,它提出了这样一个问题:这一过程的遗留问题是否导致了越来越狭隘和同质化的时装展览,这些展览可能会损害伦敦的时尚声誉,因为它们排除了许多使伦敦时尚文化独一无二的多样化网络和场所。