Fashion

Westminster Menswear Archive to stage largest menswear exhibition


The Westminster Menswear Archive has announced the launch of its autumn
‘Invisible Men’ exhibition, which will be the largest exhibition of
menswear to be staged in the UK.

Drawing exclusively from the Westminster Menswear Archive, which was
founded in 2016 to “collect, conserve, document, exhibit, and interpret
menswear”, the ‘Invisible Men’ exhibition will cover the last 120 years of
predominately British menswear with a display of more than 170 garments,
the majority of which have never been seen on public display.

Westminster Menswear Archive to stage largest menswear exhibition

Opening in October, the four-week free exhibition will be arranged into
twelve sections, presenting designer garments alongside military,
functional, and utilitarian outfits, as it looks to “explore the design
language of menswear” featuring contemporary British menswear designers
including Craig Green, Liam Hodges, A Cold Wall*, Aitor Throup, Burberry,
and Palace.

In addition, the Invisible Men exhibition will have a whole section
devoted to examples of Alexander McQueen’s early menswear designs covering
the years from 1997 to 1999, as well as a section highlighting the C.P.
Company Urban Protection range that was launched in 1998 and has been
highly influential on a generation of menswear designers.

Westminster Menswear Archive to stage largest menswear exhibition

The main focus of the exhibition will be the replication of archetypal
functional garments intended for specific industrial, technical or military
use, and how designers “have disrupted these conventions through minimal,
yet significant modifications to produce outcomes that both replicate and
subvert their source material”.

Through this approach, the language of menswear has developed an almost
“fetishistic appreciation” of the working man in all his heroic iterations,
referencing the clothing of seafarers, soldiers, athletes, firefighters,
road workers, and explorers, and will showcase a range of designer ‘source
garments’ covering military, industrial and occupational garments including
items from the British Army, the Royal Air Force, Greater Manchester
Police, the General Post Office, and Her Majesty’s Prison Service.

Westminster Menswear Archive to stage largest menswear exhibition

Invisible Men exhibition to place focus on menswear, including a whole
section dedicated to Alexander McQueen

Professor Andrew Groves, the curator of Invisible Men, states that the
functional garments that will be on display have remained “invisible”
within fashion exhibitions in favour of presenting menswear largely as the
story of the peacock male, and this showcase will “shine a light on these
invisible men”.

Westminster Menswear Archive to stage largest menswear exhibition

“Both in museums of the decorative arts or dedicated fashion museums,
menswear is significantly underrepresented,” said Groves in a statement.
“Despite the explosion in fashion exhibitions in recent years, menswear is
still marginalised or excluded from the history of dress. Its inclusion
often framed in the well-worn tropes of the ‘dandy’ or ‘peacock’.”

Grove added: “I started the Westminster Menswear Archive in 2016 through
frustration that students and designers in industry were unable to see
historically important examples of menswear, which is not the case with
womenswear which is readily available in exhibitions and galleries. Within
the last three years, we have amassed over 1700 examples of menswear
design, and the archive has proved extremely popular with students and
industry visitors alike.

Westminster Menswear Archive to stage largest menswear exhibition

“We are beginning now to tell the untold story of menswear, and I’m
incredibly excited that this exhibition will allow the public to see
highlights from the collection, most of which have never been on public
display before. I am also hopeful that it will lead to other institutions
and museums to address the history of menswear in a more meaningful way and
to give it the prominence that it deserves within their exhibition
programmes.”

Other designers and brands that will be featured within the exhibition
includes Adidas, Austin Reed, Belstaff, Bernhard Willhelm, Blades, BodyMap,
Burton, Calvin Klein, Carol Christian Poell, Christian Dior, Comme Des
Garcons, Dege and Skinner, Gieves, H&M, Harrods, Helmut Lang, Irvine
Sellars, Issey Miyake, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Jeremy Scott, John Stephen,
Junior Gaultier, Junya Watanabe, Left Hand, Levi’s, Lewis Leathers,
Mackintosh, Martin Margiela, Massimo Osti, Meadham Kirchhoff, Michiko
Koshino, Mr Fish, Nigel Cabourn, Paul Smith, Peter Saville, Prada, Sibling,
Stella McCartney, Stone Island, Umbro, Undercover, Vexed Generation,
Vivienne Westwood, Vollebak, and Zegna Sport.

Westminster Menswear Archive to stage largest menswear exhibition

Dr Danielle Sprecher, co-curator of Invisible Men, added: “This
exhibition showcases the strength and diversity of the Westminster Menswear
Archive collection and its significance as an educational and research
resource. The range of pieces that we have means, for example, that we can
display an original USAF 1950’s flight jacket alongside a variety of
different designer interpretations. By giving our students the opportunity
to study original garments, the collection feeds their creativity and
design knowledge.”

The Westminster Menswear Archive was founded in 2016, through the
support of the Quintin Hogg Trust, and is used as a resource tool to inform
contemporary design practice and to further the understanding of menswear
as a distinct design discipline. Its primary purpose is as a teaching
collection for students to support their design practice and to create new
knowledge around menswear, its history, materiality, and social meaning.

Westminster Menswear Archive to stage largest menswear exhibition

Invisible Men will be run from October 25 to November 24 at Ambika P3 at
University of Westminster, London.

Images: courtesy of the Westminster Menswear Archive



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