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Clothes

A Blend of Handicraft, Function and Fashion


 

Austrian Open-Air Museum Stübing, Enzenbach 32, 8114 Stübing

 

Opening: 29.05.2022, 9 am to 5 pm
Duration: 29.05.-31.10.2022
Curated by Michaela Steinböck-Köhler

 

Info exhibition: +43-3124/53700
Info press: +43-316/8017-9214 and -9213
presse@museum-joanneum.at


About the exhibition

 

Clothes worn by peasants in former times were predominately working clothes, which had to be practical and above all durable in their function. For this reason, preserved working clothes from earlier times is a rarity, as it was worn for as long as possible and then darned many times until it was re-used as rags, or handed over to the rag collector. More frequently preserved were the festive and Sunday-best clothes. They were worn only on particular occasions in the year and often passed on from one generation to the next. Beside their functionality, each type of clothing had symbolic character, too, however. Initially regulated by medieval dress codes, it was always determined by the social status and region concerned as well. More prosperous peasants in particular imitated the dress habits of the nobility and middle-classes. In contrast, a dress style developed in the mid-19th century, mainly in summer retreat destinations, which became popular in aristocratic and bourgeois circles, one that borrowed from the peasant working clothes, and which has fascinated the world of fashion up to the present day, or has inspired new creations. Nor must one forget the influence of the product catalogues and mail order business on the dress code of the rural population, from the period around 1900 onwards. It is the production of clothes that lies at the heart of this thematic focus, from the peasant’s handiwork up to commercially run businesses. Different occupations, from the peasant producing raw materials to the maker of ready-for-use textiles, from the hook-and-eye maker to the tailor, are shown in terms of the interplay between the most diverse participants in the creation of various products. Head coverings, shoes, aprons, and much more besides, complement the diversity of exhibits all centred around the theme of clothing.

Images

 

Publication is permitted exclusively in the context of announcements and reviews related to the exhibition. Please avoid any cropping of the images. Thank you for crediting the photographs according to the enclosed indications.

Press images Expand Box

Material


Main image „Clothes - A Blend of Handicraft, Function and Fashion “,
Main image „Clothes - A Blend of Handicraft, Function and Fashion “,

Copyright: Ingrid Schnider


S Gwand- Sujet-Quer-Presse.jpg (1.16 MB)

Main image „Clothes - A Blend of Handicraft, Function and Fashion“,
Main image „Clothes - A Blend of Handicraft, Function and Fashion“,

Copyright: Ingrid Schnider


S Gwand-Sujet-Hoch-Presse.jpg (0.95 MB)

Sewing,
Sewing,

Photo: Lukas Preininger


01 Lukas Preininger.jpg (1.63 MB)

Spinning wheel,
Spinning wheel,

Photo: Wolfgang Pöllabauer


02 Foto Wolfgang Poellabauer.jpg (1.53 MB)

Schusterleisten,
Schusterleisten,

Photo: Viktoria Rauch


03 Foto Viktoria Rauch 01.jpg (2.06 MB)

Iron,
Iron,

Photo: Viktoria Rauch


04 Foto Viktoria Rauch.jpg (1.6 MB)

Sewing box,
Sewing box,

Photo: Christopher Rupp


05 Foto Rene Christopher Rupp.jpg (1.52 MB)

Brecheln,
Brecheln,

Photo: Österreichisches Freilichtmuseum Stübing/M. Steinböck-Köhler


06 Brecheln Foto OEFM Stuebing M. Steinboeck-Koehler.jpg (1.79 MB)

To heckle,
To heckle,

Photo: Österreichisches Freilichtmuseum Stübing/M. Steinböck-Köhler


07 Hecheln Foto OEFM Stueing M. Steinboeck-Koehler.JPG (1.34 MB)

To spin,
To spin,

Photo: Österreichisches Freilichtmuseum Stübing/M. Steinböck-Köhler


08 Spinnen Foto OEFM Stuebing M. Steinboeck - Koehler.JPG (1.42 MB)

Weben,
Weben,

Photo: Österreichisches Freilichtmuseum Stübing/M. Steinböck-Köhler


09 Weben Foto OEFM Stuebing M. Steinboeck-Koehler.JPG (1.4 MB)

Sewing,
Sewing,

Photo: Österreichisches Freilichtmuseum Stübing


010 Naehen Foto OEFM Stuebing.JPG (1.44 MB)

Press contact

 

Universalmuseum Joanneum
Marketing & Communications

 

Mariahilferstraße 4
8020 Graz, Austria
P: +43/316/8017-9211
F: +43/316/8017-9253
presse@museum-joanneum.at

Marketing & Communications