The New York premiere of the exhibition Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams traces the groundbreaking history and legacy of the House of Dior and features unique pieces drawn primarily from the Dior archives

Timed tickets available for purchase starting June 17, 2021

Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams explores the more than seventy-year history of the House of Dior with over two hundred haute couture garments as well as photographs, archival videos, sketches, vintage perfume elements, accessories, and works from the Brooklyn Museumโ€™s collection. Presented in the Museumโ€™s magnificent 20,000-square-foot Beaux-Arts Court, designed by McKim, Mead & White in 1893, Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams is based on major exhibitions held at the Musรฉe des Arts Dรฉcoratifs, Paris, in 2017, the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, in 2019, and the Long Museum West Bund, Shanghai, in 2020. The exhibition is curated by Dior scholar Florence Mรผller, Avenir Foundation Curator of Textile Art and Fashion, Denver Art Museum, in collaboration with Matthew Yokobosky, Senior Curator of Fashion and Material Culture, Brooklyn Museum, and will be on view from September 10, 2021, to February 20, 2022.

New to the Brooklyn Museum presentation are works by leading American photographers such as Lillian Bassman, Cass Bird, Henry Clarke, Louise Dahl-Wolfe, William Helburn, Horst P. Horst, William Klein, David LaChapelle, Annie Leibovitz, Frances McLaughlin-Gill, Gordon Parks, Irving Penn, Karen Radkai, and Herb Ritts, with a special presentation of Richard Avedonโ€™s iconic Dovima with Elephants, Evening Dress by Dior, Cirque dโ€™Hiver, Paris (August 1955). Additionally, works by Dior and the artistic directors who succeeded himโ€”Yves Saint Laurent, Marc Bohan, Gianfranco Ferrรฉ, John Galliano, Raf Simons, and Maria Grazia Chiuriโ€”are juxtaposed with works from the Museumโ€™s collection. In one section, a rare ten-panel ebonized FSW (Folding Screen Wall) (1946โ€“55), by Charles Eames and Ray Eames, is displayed with Dior designs of the era. On view in another section are drawings and studies by Judy Chicago, presented with recent designs by Chiuri. Of special note is Diorโ€™s one-of-akind, 31-inch Fashion Doll 1880 (Afternoon Ensemble), which entered the Brooklyn Museumโ€™s collection in 1949, making it the first U.S. museum collection to acquire a Dior.

With objects drawn primarily from the Dior archives, the exhibition includes a vast array of haute couture garments that exemplify many of the French couturierโ€™s fabled silhouettes, including the โ€œNew Look,โ€ which debuted in 1947, just months before Dior would travel to the United States and open the Christian Dior New York branch. With his designs widely photographed and featured in leading publications, Dior became one of the worldโ€™s most recognized names in fashion. The exhibition also brings to life Dior’s many sources of inspirationโ€”from the splendor of flowers and other natural forms to classical and contemporary artโ€”that would influence the designers at the House of Dior for decades. A toile room, a tribute to the Ateliers, and adjacent galleries of couture garments showcase the excellence of Diorโ€™s petites mains. The central atrium of the Beaux-Arts Court has been redesigned as an enchanted garden, and a concluding gallery showcases many celebrated dresses worn by movie stars from Grace Kelly to Jennifer Lawrence.

The presentation also explores the evolution of the House of Dior through the vision of its subsequent artistic directors, from Yves Saint Laurent, whose key influences included the beatniks and the 1953 film The Wild One, to Marc Bohan and his almost thirty-year reign during the revolutionary 1960s and 1970s, as well as the 1980s, when Bohan drew inspiration from Jackson Pollock. Other artistic directorsโ€™ creations include Gianfranco Ferrรฉโ€™s architectural designs of the 1990s; John Gallianoโ€™s reinventions of the Dior silhouettes inspired by works as diverse as Egyptian sculpture and paintings by Giovanni Boldini; Raf Simonsโ€™s own minimalist take on Diorโ€™s original designs; and pieces by the current and first female creative director of Dior womenโ€™s collections, Maria Grazia Chiuri, who has brought a new vision to the historic fashion house. Notably, in 2016 Chiuri debuted T-shirts emblazoned with Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie!s statement โ€œWe Should All Be Feministsโ€ and has committed to having the official images of each new collection photographed by women. As the nationโ€™s only major museum to have galleries and a collection dedicated to feminist artโ€”the Sackler Centerโ€”the Brooklyn Museum is uniquely suited to an exploration of Chiuriโ€™s groundbreaking initiatives to champion women creatives.

Florence Mรผller, Avenir Foundation Curator of Textile Art and Fashion, Denver Art Museum, says, โ€œAs early as 1947, with his celebrated โ€˜New Lookโ€™ collection, Christian Dior transformed his sudden name recognition into the international expansion of his House, becoming a precursor of contemporary globalized fashion. The opening of the first New York branch, in 1948, was a prelude to this worldwide fame. Following on from the presentation of Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams in Paris and London, the new exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum pays tribute to this unique historic fashion adventure initiated between Paris and New York.โ€

โ€œThe Brooklyn Museum has a long record of recognizing important contributions in the history of fashion design, from The Story of Silk (1934) to the groundbreaking Of Men Only (1976) to the recent Pierre Cardin: Future Fashion (2019) and now Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams. Each exemplifies the power of fashion to influence and shift visual culture at large,โ€ says Matthew Yokobosky, Senior Curator of Fashion and Material Culture, Brooklyn Museum. โ€œToday, the work of Maria Grazia Chiuri has reshaped the Dior dream for a new generation, with a worldview that brings with it inclusivity and respect as key philosophical directives. We couldnโ€™t be more excited to present these innovative, beguilingโ€”and technically outstandingโ€”designs to our audiences.โ€

Ticket Information
Tickets for Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams go on sale to the general public Thursday, June 17, 2021. Members will have access to a pre-sale to reserve their free tickets beginning Thursday, June 10, 2021. To become a Member, reach out to membership@brooklynmuseum.org. Because of COVID-19 capacity restrictions, all visitors must have a timed ticket.

Catalogue
Published on the occasion of the exhibition Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams, opening September 10, 2021, at the Brooklyn Museum, New York, this new title chronicles the evolution of the House of Dior from its first collection in 1947 in Paris, when Christian Dior heralded the birth of a new era of elegance with his revolutionary โ€œNew Look,โ€ to the present day. Published by Rizzoli, the book includes a foreword by Anne Pasternak, Shelby White and Leon Levy Director, Brooklyn Museum, an introduction by Florence Mรผller, contributions by Matthew Yokobosky, Jรฉrรดme Gautier, and Maureen Footer, and photography by Katerina Jebb.

Christian Dior (French, 1905โ€“1957). Bar suit, afternoon ensemble with an ecru natural shantung jacket and black pleated wool crepe skirt. Haute Couture Springโ€“Summer 1947, Corolle line. Dior Hรฉritage collection, Paris. (Composite scan: Katerina Jebb)

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