Tuesday, 28 February 2017
Your ‘reading’ week was my ‘stitching’ week
Many students look at reading week as
a week to get caught up on sleep, go on vacation with friends or family, or, if
they are smart, get caught up on their reading for the term, maybe start the paper
that’s due at the end of term. My reading week was spent making art. An
important part of my academic process, for sure, but also a required part of my
future plans. As I mentioned in my last post, I had planned on reading the
theory this term, and then spending my spring creating the garments that I will
need for my summer internship program. The ‘pre-approval’ requirement of each
and every item I plan on taking to use and wear at Williamsburg put the kibosh
to that plan. I cannot send photographs of folded yardage of cloth and tell
them what I plan to do with the piece. I need to send them images of the
garments, even if they are still under construction, firstly so they know that
I am serious, but also, so they know that I know what I am doing.
Keeping this in mind, I began what
will become the research binder on the first weekend of reading week. At the
same time, I also cleaned up my studio, unpacking and repacking the boxes to go
into storage. My studio is now finally a spare room, all my equipment is in
storage. Anything that I will be making in the near future will be entirely
hand sewn, so I don’t need a space for machines, and, we need the spare bedroom
more. I managed to find all the bits that are part of my existing wardrobe, and
all the pieces of a new gown that I started two years ago, but with the move to
Montreal, didn’t finish. This is a feat, as the packers who moved our
belongings to Montreal made a real mess of things, using my fabric as packing
material. I thought that gown was a pipedream. Fortunately, I had folded all
the bits together into a bundle, and they were all still together.
I began by sorting my clothing into
piles. First, the pile of items that are good to wear as-is, those items went
into one of my two camp baskets. In a second basket, I put the items that
required mending or alteration to make them wearable. In this second basket, I
also packed the bits of my newly found gown, under construction, a yardage of
cotton, extra bits of linen lining, and a new yardage I picked up at the fabric
store the weekend before. My plan was to finish all the mending and
alterations, finish the half completed gown and possibly get the last gown
started. My goal is to have three gowns and all the required underthings and
accessories required to live week by week in Virginia with only having to do
laundry once a week. A friend would be joining me for much of reading week, as
she too needed a new gown. Lynn has sewn modern clothing for herself, but was
intimidated by the process of sewing a historical gown by herself. Sewing
together was good for both of us, as I had to keep us on track every day so
that we would get the most amount of work accomplished, but also because I had
to articulate to her, how to do each step of the process. We have different
brain processes, so I was forced to show as well as explain to her what I was
doing. I also needed to allow her to do the majority of the work on her own
gown so that she would feel accomplished and understand what she was doing for
the next time. By having Lynn work with me, we were able to work regular
business hours, and managed to get most of the three gowns finished before she
had to head back to work in Ottawa. My half-finished gown is now completely
finished, my new gown is one full day’s work away from completion, and Lynn’s
is about two days away from competition (at her work pace). Monday 27th
February, I went back to my reading.
My plan now is to continue reading,
finish the last bits of work I need to finish for my wardrobe on the weekends,
and then have a copy of the research binder for both Williamsburg and to turn
in to my fibres and materiality professor for a final term project. Questions
that the Costume Approval Committee ask range from giving a brief description
of the item and its intended use, primary source documentation, adaptations I
have made from the original extant garments and why, and listing the textiles,
notions, colours and construction techniques used (Foundation
2003) .
It will be a substantial piece of work when I am finished.
There are things that I have had to
consider before and alongside simply creating clothing to wear. The main
thought/question I have is how do I know what I know about the period I am
recreating? In a recent facebook group discussion on clothing re-creation, I
warned against copying fellow living historians (Gordon 2017) . I told the new
person that sometimes folks who have been doing this a while will make
‘something pretty’ because they want something pretty to wear. It is not based
on primary source documentation, more that what they are doing comes from a
more emotional side of things. It may, to the untrained eye, look like a
perfect recreation of the period, but those who are in the know, will know,
that the item is not ‘from the period’, but more a modern ‘fashion’ of the
current era, inspired by the period. Confusing, right? So how do I know what I
know, and how do I know if what I am doing is historically correct? This
project is good for me, in that it will force me to document each and every
decision I have made. There will be no ‘reverse documenting’, hoping that I can
find sources for the decisions. I will
have to do the research and back up every choice before I begin the construction
process.
My ‘old brown sacque’ is the first
gown that I made entirely by hand for the 18th century. I used a
brown linen twill that has a remarkable resemblance to a fine summer weight
wool. A burn test was how I determined that it was not actually wool. I made
the gown using a draped pattern of my body wearing stays, based on an extant
sacque backed gown. I also looked at numerous paintings to see if a sacque
would be worn by a common woman, or if it was a fashion reserved for those
women who wear silk all day long. I took an educated guess to say yes, and went
ahead and made the gown. I have been exceptionally pleased with how it turned
out, and how it is wearing. For the past several years, it is the only gown I
have worn, wearing it for days at a time at events, changing just my body
linens daily. It is aired out on the line following the event and then hung
back up until the next time it is needed. No, I have yet to wash the gown, and
don’t plan to. As it is entirely constructed from natural fibres, it really
doesn’t smell. When I began the ‘half finished’ gown, I wanted something a bit
more ‘fashionable’ than a sacque, and so chose to construct an English backed
gown, also known as en fourreau. The progression of the back of gowns transitions from the
sacque, with the pleats hanging from the shoulders, to the en fourreau where
those pleats are stitched down to just below the waistline, and spring out from
the hips in a continuous piece from shoulder to hem. In my eye, being an older
woman, this seemed to be a natural progression to something more fashionable.
In the third quarter of the 18th century, younger women are wearing
this more fitted back with a full front, pinned at centre front, and with a
fully circular skirt, called a round gown. The transitional gown is fitted in
the back, but open in the front and worn over a stomacher and matching or
contrasting petticoat. The stomacher is a triangular stiffened piece that is
pinned to the bodice front, over which the gown is pinned. This style of gown
offers more flexibility in fit if your weight fluctuates, as mine does. The
round gown is as it fits, so if you lose weight, you have overlap, which is not
pretty, or the fronts don’t meet if you’ve gained weight, which is also not
pretty. I am quite happy being a little old fashioned if it means the lines of
my gown look nice. For me it is all about the cut, never about the decoration.
And so, my second gown is cut en fourreau, more fashionable than the sacque,
but still a bit old fashioned for 1780. I chose to make the gown from a striped
pink and grey, cotton/linen blend. It will be a nice, serviceable gown. I will
wear it with a matching stomacher, over a contrasting, solid grey linen
petticoat.
The third gown, still under construction, is even more of a transition
piece. It is based on an extant round gown in the Philadelphia Museum of Art,
accession number 1959-113-1. I have made some considered changes to my own
inspired gown in both fabric and in a slight style difference. The original
gown is in a grey striped cotton. My gown is in a grey striped, 100% linen
fabric, the stripes being slightly smaller in scale. The original is a round
gown, in that the centre fronts meet edge to edge, but the original gown also
has the robings found on older, open, stomacher front gowns. The original’s
construction makes it look like a stomacher gown with the full skirt of a round
gown. As I mentioned above, my weight fluctuates, and will, living in Virginia
summer heat, and so I have made my gown as a stomacher front, round gown.
I have chosen linen or linen blends for all of my gowns as linen is the
most comfortable fibre to wear in the heat. Also, as all of these gowns are
meant to be working gowns, I need something that will be hard wearing and
simple. I could have chosen a floral cotton print as one of my gown materials,
but I still feel that florals are more for special occasions, suited for my
social class, but more in keeping for the Sunday best dress. I am also trying
to keep my wardrobe within a tight budget. Linens and cotton/linen blends can
be found at my local fabric store for under $20/metre, buying a cotton floral
in an appropriate print could run upwards of $40/yard before duty and shipping
to Canada. I can afford a $100 dress, not a $300 dress, and certainly will feel
more comfortable if ‘heritage’ happens and I spill something on them or tear
them through wearing.
My wardrobe will be rounded out with enough white linen shifts (the body
linen layer) to do me a week, twill linen, half boned stays, a striped linen
petticoat, a mustard linen petticoat, a brown stuff (to match my sacque)
petticoat, a grey linen twill petticoat with a frill at the hem, edged in
goose-turd green cotton tape, stomachers to match each gown, dainty linen caps,
a straw flat bonnet, a black silk bonnet, stockings, pockets, neck
handkerchiefs, sewing huswife, spectacles, and a bargello worked wallet. Also
black leather shoes, and if there is enough time, a linen bedgown to wear as a
‘coat’ over my gowns if it rains, or as an upper body garment, worn with
petticoats if I am going to be doing dirty work and want to keep my gowns
clean. I will also have with me a couple of market wallets, one to fit my
clothing in, and another to carry my accessories. I am also trying to decide
whether to bring my very French coffee mug made of red clay dipped in green
glaze, or buy a Virginian white clay mug while I’m there and try to blend in a
bit more with the people around me. Trying to blend in with society was a big
thing in this period.
My current reading list:
Cox, Abby.
2016. "Musings from the Millinery: Revealing the Truth About 18th-Century
Women's Necklines." Colonial Williamsburg Historic Trades Blog - Making
History Now. January 29. Accessed October 20, 2016. http://makinghistorynow.com/2016/01/musings-from-the-millinery-revealing-the-truth-about-18th-century-womens-necklines/.
Eacott, Jonathan P. 2012.
"Making an Imperial Compromise: The Calico Acts, the Atlantic Colonies,
and the Structure of the British Empire." The William and Mary
Quarterly 731-762.
Foundation, Colonial
Williamsburg. 2003. Costume Approval Form. proceedural and approval
forms, Williamsburg Virginia: Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.
Gordon, Tracy. 2017.
"18th c sewing." Facebook. February 23. Accessed February 23,
2017.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/618389418346204/permalink/618611394990673/.
Hagist, Don. N. 2016. Wives,
Slaves, and Servant Girls: Advertisements for Female Runaways in American
Newspapers 1770-1780. Yardley, Pennsylvania: Westholme Publishing.
Styles, John. 2007. The
Dress of the People: Everyday Fashion in Eighteenth-Century England. New
Haven and London: Yale University Press.
Shit just got real: when your OCD scares the living tar out of you at the thought of ‘pre-approval’ of your clothing
This morning I received a note from Jay Howlett at Colonial
Williamsburg, the gentleman I will be undertaking an internship with this
summer. He was asking for photographs of my historical clothing so that he can
have it pre-approved through their wardrobe before I arrive on site. This will
allow for a smooth transition when my internship begins, and I can start right
away in the program. I knew that I would need approval before being allowed to
wear anything I brought with me, it is what I would expect if I was running the
wardrobe department. After all, my clothing will be a reflection on their
department, the site itself, as well as on my shoulders.
It was my plan to ‘read all the things’ this term, getting
the theory of why I do what I do under my belt before embarking on a major art
project of overhauling my wardrobe. That plan was tossed out with this
morning’s bathwater as I replied to the request, “sure, I can get on that this
week!”
“Colonial Williamsburg in
Virginia is a hallmark for many Americans with a hankering to experience the
past. ‘When we were down there last January,’ writes Alicia Newcomb, ‘we were
able to speak to some of the actors one on one. Most of them are actually
historians or certified in some other way…I’ve been going there since I was a
little girl” (cited in Weeks 2016, 5).
Williamsburg is such a
hallmark, that professors in my very first undergraduate program held it up as
the pinacle of interpretation. Students from the Costume Studies program at
Dalhousie university have been sent there on interships for decades. It is finally
my turn. Why is it that I am so freaked out about the notion of my clothing
being ‘pre-approved’? A lot of it stems from the fact that my own clothing
needs have often taken a back burner to those who are working the front lines
of interpretation at the historic sites I have worked for. My job is to be
behind the scenes, not to be seen by the public. When I am, it is often because
I am filling in for another interpreter. This isn’t to say that my clothes are
bad, they aren’t. It’s more that you don’t get to see the underlayers of my
clothes, so shortcuts have been taken over the years in order to ‘be dressed’.
My outermost layer is completely acceptable in my mind’s eye. The other layers
I had wanted to spend the Spring months finessing in order for them to be
acceptable as well. I also wanted to make a new, more fashionable dress than my
older, slightly out of fashion sacque-backed gown. This week’s readings have
allowed me to really think about what I wanted to do with my clothes, and what
I feel needs fixing.
Frank Trentmann’s article, Materiality in the Future of History:
Things, Practices, and Politics (Trentmann
2009) ,
informs us “The status of things has sparked a good deal of soul-searching
that oscillates between fears that life is becoming dematerialized and a
celebration of objects as ‘thought companions, as life companions”, he goes on
to explain that “things today are shaking our fundamental understanding of
subjectivity, agency, emotions, and the relations between humans and nonhumans” (Trentmann 2009, 284) . Ideas that
Trentmann wanted to explore considered materiality on three dimensions, the
“essence of things, choice and practice, and material politics” (Trentmann 2009, 286) . If I consider thes
ideas with regards to my own materiality, and the things that I will bring with
me to Virginia, it is, first of all, very important that I have ‘my own
things’. What does this mean? Well, for my own comfort level, wearing my own
clothing, articles of dress that I have chosen for myself, created for myself,
will make me feel far more confident than if I am wearing ‘stock costume number
5’. I will not have to worry about whether I get it dirty, or how it fits and
how I can move in it. They will be my clothes, made for my body. Unique to me.
They will no longer be a costume, in
essence, but are my clothes. I have chosen
the fabrics to create the garments, and I am also chosing which garments I will
create for my wardrobe. My art practice
is the creation of historic dress for interpreters, I should look like I might
know what I am doing. Then there is the political
negotiating I will have to do to justify my reasons for creating the clothes I
made, but also the accessories, the other things
I will bring with me to do my job this summer as an interpretation intern.
When we start a new job, we
choose what clothes we will wear, sometimes buying a new outfit for the first
day, to make a good impression. We pack our briefcase with the items we will
need from home to get us through the day comfortably, our favourite pens, a
coffee mug, lunch bag, comfortable ‘indoor’ shoes, family photos to personalize
our desks. I am having to consider all those things too, but with an eye to the
historical. Will my favourite coffee mug, made by a local artisan based on
archeaological finds here in Quebec, be acceptable for use in the Revolutionary
city? Or is it completely out of cultural context? I will need an appropriate
carrying bag to bring my things to and from work, my academic’s leather
briefcase is modern, and not appropriate. Should I make a market wallet, or
find an appropriate basket to bring? Which of these items will make packing and
crossing an international border easier? But also, which one would be
appropriate for my historical economic class? I will need to clean all the
modern from my sewing housewife and re-spin my threads from their modern,
plastic spools on to historically appropriate thread winders. I have sent my
historical glasses frames off to be fixed and new lenses installed so that I
will be able to see, but I now have to get on with the project of making a new
case for them, as at the moment, they are carried to events in a very modern
clamshell case, I pull them out of the case under the cover of a petticoat
edge. If I have to justify every item of historical kit to Williamsburg’s
material culture staff, the modernity I usually get away with just won’t fly.
Trentmann reminds us that “Practices thus look beyond possessions. Instead of
taking either object or individual as it’s starting point, research on
practices focuses on how users, things, tools, competence, and desires are
coordinated. This means that value is not based in a product or its meanings
but in how it is put to use” (Trentmann 2009, 297) . Trentmann tells us
that both Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty saw the world as “woven into people’s
bodies, identities, and actions. Things recruit us as much as we recruit them.
And, in addition to highly visible objects, these include the hidden material
networks, technologies, and relationships that shape everyday life” (Trentmann 2009, 300) . I am having to
really examine the minutae of my everyday life to see if I have all of the
things I will need in my historical kit to just get through the day. It is far
more than simply getting the outer layers of my costume correct, I have to embody the material culture of my
eighteenth-century self.
In a recent online discussion
over my eyeglass frames, we discussed how easy it is to fall into the living
history trap that we are all expected to become ensnared in. As a progressive
living historian, I cannot simply give Jas. Townsend, a walmart type merchant
known for carrying all the material goods you might need, my credit card and
buy the goods I need. As a
progressive, my material culture needs are expected to be a higher caliber than
what Townsend carries. So I am expected to make my own material culture. That
idea is great in theory, but not what would have been expected of my historical
counterpart any more than it is of my modern self. I bought my glasses frames.
They aren’t perfect, but I am terrified to try to fix them on my own, that and
my local optomitrist broke them while trying to insert new lenses. The way they
will need fixing will require the skills of a jewler, a soldiering iron, and
buffing tools. My mum may have been able to fix them for me, but she is not well
enough, so off they were sent to an optrician in Halifax willing to do the job,
as he has ‘fixed’ other historical frames for other progressive living
historians. Hopefully, when they return in two months, the bridge piece will
have more curve, the new lenses will be installed, and the tacky, modern
‘finish’ will be buffed off, leaving the look of the plain steel to weather
through wearing. The piece of material culture that I can work on (the glasses
case) to complete this important part of my kit has been researched and
patterned, I just have to find the time to carry out the bargello embroidery
and sew the piece together.
Shoes are another item that I
cannot make myself. At Williamsburg, in a lot of the interiors, the
interpretation staff wear slippers instead of their outside shoes. It helps cut
down on the dust and dirt being carried inside. I completely wore out my
slippers a few years ago, and have been ‘getting by’ with a pair of black
canvas slip on shoes from somewhere in the Orient. They are modern, but most
people don’t see them, as I only wear them in the evenings when the public is
out of camp. This week I also sent home a tracing of my foot and the
measurements needed to have a new pair of mules made by a shoemaker I have a
great relationship with in Halifax. We have worked together making shoes for
some of the historic sites over the years, and I know she will make a pair of
mules that will live up to the progressive standards. In America, many
progressives send away to the UK for shoes to be made by Sarah Juniper, but the
American dollar is much closer to the Euro or the Pound. I just cannot justify
close to $1000 for a pair of shoes, no matter how beautiful they are. That, and
I’d rather give my business to someone more local to me, one of my peers in
supplying historic sites with clothing and accoutrements.
These musings are to question
whether I am engaging with ‘commodity fetishism’? Martha Rosler writes in Notes From the Field: Materiality, that
this notion set forth by Marx “shapes our responses to much of the object
world, and has its origins in the mode of production” (Rosler 2013, 11) . We certainly are
engaged in commodity fetishism if we are expected, as progressives, to recreate
everything in our material culture baskets. It shouldn’t be expected of us as
artists, or as consumers. I left that online conversation griping that I should be able to buy a historically
correct pair of eyeglass frames, that require no tweaking, and that I should be
able to take them to my local optomitrist to have lenses installed. Period.
That I should not have to face the long noses of folks who would consider me
‘farb’ for not knowing how to do ‘all the things’ myself.
I will leave you with ideas I
have also been facing with the concept of the gaze. Having also read Kate
Haulman’s article Fashion and the Culture
Wars of Revolutionary Philadelphia, I am also considering, as women in the
period would have, how my clothes will speak for me as a person in society.
Haulman states that, “Fashion could not only visually establish but also
undermine social hierarchy in colonial cities” (Haulman 2005, 626) . The article
explains how different fashion choices, from clothing to hairstyles were adopted
by both men and women in Revolutionary Philadelphia, and how people did not so
readily give up those styles once the city was abandoned by the British to Colonial
governance. Haulman suggests that fashion has far more to do with class
hierarchy than with political leanings, and that fashion helped to establish
hegemonic gender expressions as well as social standing and romantic
entanglements. This article help reaffirm my own ideas on how we dressed in the
eighteenth century had little to do with political or cultural leanings (French
or British), and more to do with what people saw as ‘fashionable’, and wanting
to be on top of that ‘fashionable’ game. I mentioned my ‘old brown
sacque-backed gown’ above and in prior writings. I have always thought that an
older fashion is more appropriate for an older woman, certainly in a more
country setting, but I will be in a ‘big city’ in eighteenth-century standards,
very near to Philadelphia the centre of the revolution, even by
eighteenth-century standards of distance. I will not be on the ‘frontier’ of
Canada, or even in ‘backwater’ Nova Scotia. I’m certain that even a woman of my
age would have wanted a new, more fashionable dress if travelling to a new
city, to start a new job…
So that is where my head is
this week. In a blind panic thinking about all the things I need to have made,
photographed, and approved. And I realize that I am running out of time.
Terms
Farb - is a derogatory term used in the hobby of
historical re-enacting (living history) in reference to participants who are
perceived to exhibit indifference to historical authenticity, either from a
material-cultural standpoint or in action. It can also refer to the inauthentic
materials used by those reenactors. (Wikipedia)
Bibliography
Haulman, Kate. 2005. "Fashion and the Culture
Wars of Revolutionary Philadelphia." William and Mary Quarterly
625-662.
Rosler, Martha. 2013. "Notes From the Field:
Materiality." The Art Bulletin 10-12.
Trentmann, Frank. 2009. "Materiality in the
Future of History: Things, Practices, and Politics." Journal of British
Studies 283-307.
Weeks, Linton. 2016. "NPR History Dept." NPR.org.
January 21. Accessed February 3, 2017.
http://www.npr.org/sections/npr-history-dept/2016/01/21/463398647/american-history-lives-a-story-of-the-people-by-the-people-for-the-people.
Research-Creation
Lifting off from Prown’s statement, “Cultural expression is not limited to things. But the techniques of
material culture should be part of the tool kit of the well-equipped cultural
scholar” (Prown 1982,
5) ,
I am exploring what it means to undertake a research-creation project. I will
admit to a sense of disconnect I am feeling with my current situation, both in
the way I undertake research in the realm of academia, but also within academia
itself. This term may see a lot of self reflection as I struggle to figure out
my place within the university, and as I question how research is undertaken.
My meander through the
readings I set out for myself started out fairly focused, but then things
changed and I was able to take two directed studies (one in Material Culture,
the other in Research-Creation and Materiality) instead of the singular one on
material culture in the 18thC. This may prove to be both difficult and dynamic,
as I bounce ideas from one reading list into the other. At the beginning, I
read the introduction to Joanne Entwistle’s book, The Fashioned Body, and
about how we should be writing about fashion. Then I moved into material
culture studies itself with The article by Michael Yonan, Toward a Fusion of Art History and Material
Culture Studies, which lead me to Prown’s seminal work on the theory and
methodology of the field, Mind in Matter:
An Introduction to Material Culture Theory and Method. That’s where the
above statement caught my attention. It has stuck with me for a week now. After
Prown’s article, I went back to my reading list and pulled up a more recent
exploration on material culture study, Richard Grassby’s Material Culture and Cultural History. In it, Grassby explores what
it means to be a material cultural historian today. What struck me from that
article was Grassby’s mentioning that,
“Many cultural historians ignore the
physical environment in which culture is embedded. They elevate abstract ideas
above things, symbolic meaning above utility, and imagination above imperial
facts. They generalize from images and texts as though they were material
commodities, focusing on how the world was represented and perceived, not on
how it functioned or how it was physically or emotionally experienced. In the
giddy world of symbolic interpretation, goods have no practical use and the
consumption function has no basis in reality.
Social reality has to be
structured to be perceived and understood. Whether is communicates through
words or visual representation, the cultural system relies on metaphor and
symbolism” (Grassby 2005, 591) .
My notes in
the margins at this point ask why the ‘material’ part of culture is not
important to the cultural historian. Materiality is very important to the
living historian, so why not the cultural historians, are we not similar
beings? Grassby then goes on to inform us,
“Objects give material form to the
rules and belief patterns of those who trade, purchase, or use them. Unlike
cultural anthropologists, material culturists may not be directly concerned
with systems of belief and practical activity, but they are certainly
interested in goods as symbols and tools of culture, and in structural patterns
by which artifacts are organized into meaningful relationships.
This approach engages the senses as
well as the mind. Choses vecues, the
physical conditions of everyday life and the options for action of different
groups” (Grassby 2005, 592-3) .
The senses are very important to the living historian, they
help cement historical moments in our minds, what it may have felt like to live
the life of those whose stories we portray at museums and historic sites.
History is so much more than big battles, and Kings, it is the everyday, what
Grassby states when he discusses “how people met the basic needs of food,
shelter, and warmth and whether levels of comfort, privacy, personal security,
and taste improved” (Grassby 2005, 592-3) . So for me, as a
living historian, the material culture is important, and equally important is
knowing the techniques of how those things of material culture were made.
So, over the years I’ve come to the point of understanding
that my brain works in a different manner than the average, mainstream
academic. Often I think more coherently in images and things than I do in
words. This was expressed by my MA advisor Dr. Randi Warne at Mount Saint
Vincent University, when she encouraged me to create a fashion collection to
help support my thesis, and it apparently has been noticed by my team here at
Concordia, as they have placed me in a Fine Arts stream of the Humanities
program, allowing me to undertake a research-creation project to support my
dissertation.
But what exactly is research-creation, and how can I apply
it to my PhD program? The next article I read leans more towards my
‘Materiality’ course in that the authors discuss research-creation techniques
within the Canadian university setting. In this course, I am exploring the
materiality of my own art practice (research-creation), and this article was
written by researchers from my own university. I had hopes that they might
guide me in understanding what it is that I do, and how I would go about
obtaining funding for the rest of my time here.
Owen Chapman
and Kim Sawchuk’s article, Research-Creation:
Intervention, Analysis and “Family Resemblances”, abstract states,
“Research-creation’ is an emergent
category within the social sciences and humanities that speaks to contemporary
media experiences and modes of knowing. The focus of this article if how this
practice contributes to the research agenda of the digital humanities and
social sciences. How the term has been articulated in academic policy
discourses and examine prominent academic analysis that describe the practice
of research-creation. Using Wittgenstein’s notion of ‘family resemblances’
before moving to a discussion of four modes of research-creation:
‘Research-for-creation’, ‘research-from-creation’, ‘creative presentations of
research’, ‘creation-as-research” (Sawchuk 2012, 5) .
My first
question was, is it really ‘emergent’, or does academia want to think it is so
they can be thought of as ‘cutting edge’? Turns out that no, the concepts are
not really new, but they can be considered ‘emergent’, especially within
Canadian academic circles, and definitely within the research funding
organizations “Fonds Quebecios de la Recherche sur la Societe et la Culture
(FQRSC), and Federal Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).
The third funding body the authors mentioned, the Canada Council for the Arts
has a long standing tradition of funding artists, though I’m not sure I would
find a great fit within that funding body as the project requires “production
of a new work that will have some sort of public exhibition” (Sawchuk 2012,
9) .
Where I would be exhibiting my own work tends to fall outside acceptable
academic venues for art exhibition, more likely put up as an exhibit in a
museum or embodied upon(?) a living historian. It would, however, fit into the
FQRSC standards of having the potential to “enrich ‘national and international
cultural heritage’ SSHRC, 2011a)” (Sawchuk 2012, 9) .
My thoughts
then drifted a bit as I read the introductory chapter of Dr. John Potvin’s
book, The Places and Spaces of Fashion,
1800-2007. In this chapter, Dr. Potvin argues that,
“encounters with fashion happen
within a space at a given place and do not simply function as backdrops but are
pivotal to the meaning and vitality that the experiences of fashion trace. More
often than not, these environments mitigate, control, inform, and enhance how
fashion is experienced, performed, consumed, seen, exhibited, purchased,
appreciated, desired, and, of course displayed. Conversely, fashion enhances
the identity, worth, pleasure, and currency of certain places and spaces…” (Potvin 2009)
Then, if fashion ‘makes’ the space come alive, and the space
helps to embody fashion, it would seem that the study of the history of fashion
is both important to the historical narrative, but also, it is important to
study the accuracy of that fashion. In future weeks, I will be undertaking a
critical examination of the clothing that makes up the ‘toolkit’ my husband and
I bring with us into the field of living history. I will question the
materiality of the individual items of dress, how they can be improved upon in
cut and construction to give a better ‘look’ to the embodied fashion. I will
also examine the practices of our living history experiences to understand how
and why items of dress work, while others do not. Then I will consider my own
art practice in creating historical fashion, how that has changed over the
years, and why I feel this change is for the better.
Bibliography
Grassby, Richard. 2005. "Material Culture and
Cultural History." The Journal of Interdisciplinary History
591-603.
Potvin, John. 2009. "Introduction." In The
Places and Spaces of Fashion, 1800-2007, by John Potvin, 1-18. New York:
Routledge.
Prown, Jules David. 1982. "Mind in Matter: An
Introduction to Material Culture Theory and Method." Winterthur Portfolio
1-19.
Sawchuk, Owen Chapman and Kim. 2012.
"Research-Creation: Intervention, Analysis and "Family
Resemblances"." Canadian Journal of Communication 5-26.
“how do we know it’s authentic?”
As Dr. Stephen Snow sat with his co-worker on a hot august afternoon, prior to writing his PhD dissertation on Performing the Pilgrim, this very question was asked in response to another tourist stating, “This is a great way to learn history!”
In his chapter Signs Ar
Not the Garb of Meaning: On the Social Analysis of Material Things in the
book Materiality, Webb Keane writes,
“the best known social analysis of materiality focus on production. Since
production is, in a brute sense, a cause of the product, these analyses often
work with some version of indexicality” (Keane 2005, 186) . He examines Marx’s
distinction between nonalienated and alienated labour when he understands that
“the weaver can see herself in the cloth she weaves because it bears the
evident stamp of her work” and that “Man’s productive activity leaves its
mark…on [and thus is indexed by] all he touches” (Keane 2005, 187) . Keane explains that
we see things that are familiar to us, that, “the viewer tends to look only at
those that are ‘right-side up.’ Determining what features count towards
resemblance commonly involves larger questions of social value and authority” (Keane
2005, 190) .
Keane further informs us that, “this recognition is mediated by what you assume
about the world” (Keane 2005, 191) . It seems to me,
that through her work, Janet Arnold began the process of teaching costume
historians to see more clearly the artifacts they were studying. We are
constantly questioning our assumptions of the world and historic dress. Just
recently in a blog post, Lauren Stowell, writing for American Duchess, asked us as researchers to ‘turn our
pre-conceived ideas upside down’. In this entry, Stowell wrote about
‘conformational bias’, in that we see what we want to see when we look at
artwork. She told us that we should go back and really look hard at images
we’ve looked at many times before, and note down ‘everything’ we see, and ask
ourselves if we are seeing new things in the painting, in the costume, in the
hair, and the accessories being worn by the sitter (Stowell 2017) . Keane concludes his
article by stating,
“To take clothes in particular, and
objects more generally, as expressions of meanings that really lie elsewhere is
to depend on certain assumptions not just about objects, but also about signs.
Clothing seems most superficial to those who take signs to be about the
clothing of immaterial meanings. Like clothing, in this view, the sign both
reveals and conceals, and it serves to mediate relations between the self and
others” (Keane 2005, 200) .
As I prepare myself for my upcoming internship to Colonial
Williamsburg, I am thinking long and hard about my wardrobe. I am uncomfortable
with the idea of someone dressing me for the role I will play as interpreter at
the living history site. I am used to a high degree of quality in my clothing,
but especially in my living history clothing. Like the mentor I will be working
under, I hand stitch my own clothing, following methods and patterns that would
have been used in the period to create the garments. It is my intention to
spend the Spring term, overhauling my personal living history wardrobe so that
it is as authentic as I can make it
to be, replacing garments that I now know to be incorrect, and creating a more
‘fashionable’ gown, as my ‘old stand-by’ sacque-backed gown will be seen as
being old fashioned by those who live and work in the Revolutionary City. The
sacqued back gown is an older style of garment than the more fitted bodiced
dresses worn by interpreters in the modern recreation of Williamsburg. It is my
hope that in bringing a high standard of quality garments with me, I will be
able to wear my own clothes while working there. The purpose is multi-faceted,
first, and most importantly, to wear my own clothes instead of ‘interpreter’s
costume #1’, second, to study the effects of wearing more accurate clothing
daily in my working life, how they will break down through wear, how they will
work with my body? Third, to bring actual ‘heritage’ to my garments through
wearing, instead of breaking them down theatrically to achieve the look of a
Loyalist settler when I return to living history programming in Nova Scotia
museum sites. It is not just the recreation of historical garments via
historical methods that inspires me, but the breaking down and life span of
those garments through wearing. This will be an interesting, and a once in a
life-time experience for me as a researcher, as I will be wearing the clothing
every day instead of just occasionally, as Arjun Appadurai notes “the body
calls for disciplines that are repetitious, or at least periodic” (Appadurai
1996, 67) .
I wish to give this body that opportunity.
Bibliography
Appadurai, Arjun. 1996. "Consumption, Duration,
and History." In Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of
Globalization, by Arjun Appadurai, 66-85. Minneapolis and London:
University of Minneapolis Press.
Arnold, Janet. 1985. Patterns
of Fashion: The Cut and Construction of Clothes for Men and Women C. 1560-1620.
London: Drama Publishers.
Keane, Webb. 2005.
"Signs Are Not the Garb of Meaning: On the Social Analysis of Material
Things." In Materiality, by Daniel Miller, 183-205. Durham and
London: Duke University Press.
Schneider, Annette B. Weiner
and Jane. 1991. "Introduction." In Cloth and Human Experience,
by Annette B. Weiner and Jane Schneider, 1-27. Washington: Smithsonian Books.
Snow, Stephen. 1986.
"Plimoth Plantation: Living History as Blurred Genre." Kentucky
Folklore Record 34-41.
Stowell, Lauren. 2017.
"American Duchess Shoes." American Duchess Historical Costuming
Blog. February 7. Accessed February 8, 2017.
http://americanduchess.blogspot.ca/2017/02/research-we-see-what-we-want-to-see-we.html.
Whatever shall I wear?
“The relationship between art gallery and
fashion, to cite but one example, provocatively proves how, on the one hand,
fashion can transform places and spaces, adding, deferring, or altering the
identity of that environment, while, on the other hand, it can increase the
cachet and cultural currency of a (living) designer” (Potvin 2009,
3) .
Can exhibits
also then cause fashion trends within the living history community? When we see
a new garment on display in an exhibit, do we all then not want a copy of that
garment, or the fabric it was made from, for our own selves, whether or not it
is historically appropriate for our persona? What do our clothes say to the
museum or historic site visitor? Do they even know when things are ‘right’, do
they understand what they are seeing? These are questions I have been grappling
with this past week.
When I look
at a photo from a living history event and say, “dear God,
what the hell is that?” I kick myself for being a clothing snob. Many would see
that gown as being beautiful, not understanding that everything I see is wrong,
modern, not historically accurate at all. I see things like this pop up in
many living history events, of all ilk and have the same visceral reaction.
When people suggest that I work in movies, the same feeling of dread occurs. I
know I’m not alone, through the many ‘snark’ pages on social media, I know
there are people out there who see things as I do, but what exactly are we
seeing that others don’t? How do I go about explaining the difference?
I have been
reading deCerteau’s Practices of Everyday
Life, he too mentions how “our research has concentrated above all on the
uses of space, on the ways of frequenting or dwelling in a place” (de Certeau 1984, xxii). DeCerteau complains that we
have placed “an increasing distance between actual everyday practices and the
‘scenarios’ that punctuate with utopian
images the hum of operations in every laboratory” (Michel de Certeau 1984, xxiii) . If we take the
space in which we inhabit the world most intimately, our clothing, and apply
this distance as the construction of clothing, vs. the scenario we see in the
laboratory of history, that utopia of history the public views the most often
is in video, movies, TV shows and the like. The clothing for those pieces, for
theatre in general, tend to be very modern adaptations, constructed quickly for
the ease of the actor, to make the items more comfortable, to make the actor
look sexy or handsome to our modern eye. The problem is, that the everyday
practice of making and wearing clothing in any historical era was to upholster
the body, if you will. Comfort was the least expectation. There are also far
different method of construction between sitting down at a machine and ‘banging
out’ an outfit in twelve hours, and constructing by hand over a few days. It’s
not just the machine involved, though that plays a large role. I can sew long seams
by machine, but there are places where you just cannot fit the work into the
machine to be able to sew smoothly. There are also little, nuanced bits of the
construction that serve multiple purposes, and that can only be done by hand.
To an untrained eye, top-stitching is just top-stitching, can be done by
machine, through all the layers. To a person who has studied and understood how
that ‘top’-stitching works, machine stitching is entirely wrong. What may
appear to be top-side stitching, in most periods, is carried out from the
underside, the lining side of the garment. It is a finesse that holds the
fashion layers in place, but also all the inter layers, the canvases of the
garment, that the wearer will never see. You see, it is not just the space we inhibit,
but how that space is constructed that makes the difference. It is just as
important to get the stitching of the garment correct for the period, as it is
for the wall colour of the room where we put on our programming. That ‘everyday
practice’ of clothing construction that has been lost to many of us.
Currently, I am constructing a pair of breeches for a
friend. I am taking photos and putting up a tutorial of how to construct the
garment online for others to see. There are challenges with this garment, and
it’s construction. First of all, how many people today know what breeches are?
How should they fit? What are the differences in fashion throughout the period
this garment would have been worn? When, exactly were they worn? Issues of
modern notions of gender also arise. These questions arise within the living
history community, they certainly did when I was in discussion with my client,
my friend.
My friend wanted an ‘historically accurate’ garment,
he voiced this desire when he came to me, knowing that I would make him as
historically accurate a garment as I could. I say ‘as I could’, because at that
very first meeting, there were compromises I knew I would need to make with
regards to ‘historical accuracy.’ My friend is a potter, a tradesman, he needs
to wash the garment often, or it will not longer be a garment, and will become
a sculpture, with the amount of clay that will be absorbed by the fibres. Now
tradesmen of this kind would have worn natural coloured or white breeches and
waistcoat, as they are easier to keep clean, and remain looking somewhat
clean-ish as they are working. His current waistcoat is wool, he wanted wool
breeches as well, as that is what he was used to wearing when he was a soldier.
I was faced with so many problems within that first half hour. First, I knew
that his idea of washing clothing was to throw everything in the washing
machine at the same time, and then into the dryer. He would not be prepared to
do anything otherwise, as that is not how his everyday practice of life works.
Wool requires special washing treatment, and should never go into a dryer. The
second compromise, once I talked him out of wool, and told him that linen would
be just as hard wearing, and possibly more comfortable, was that he wanted
colour, as his existing waistcoat was of coloured cloth, and he did not like
the idea of wearing all white. Ok. I have heavy, coloured linen, one that will
go nicely with his waistcoat. I would have to wash the fabric in hot water
first though, and dry it in the dryer, or else after the very first wearing, he
would return the garments to me because they no longer fit, and I would have to
replace them, for free.
So I have already compromised on accuracy by making a
garment with cloth that would not be appropriate either in colour nor in
washability. But it is not just the cloth that needs to be laundered with
modern methods, my stitching needs to undergo that same process without falling
apart. There are also parts of the construction of breeches that need to be
done by hand, there is just no way they can be undertaken by machine. In the
end, I also had to explain my choices to the ‘progressive’ living history
community I belong to, as we usually hand sew everything, and follow period
practices of cleaning and laundry. I felt it was important to have that
discussion though, as there are times when dealing with either individual
customers, or larger historic sites where the progressive approach just doesn’t
work. In the end, I am using a mixture of machine and hand techniques to
construct these breeches. They will ‘look’ right on the outside as far as
construction goes, but will be almost entirely machine finished on the inside
so they do not fall apart in the very first wash. They will also be fitted to
the client, so that he is wearing a garment that appears fashionable for the
era. If possible, I will work on his modern aversions to wearing white, and
will eventually, perhaps, create a more historically accurate wardrobe for him
in the future. He may be perfectly happy with his version of historically
accurate, and I have to be ok with that. I know that by making the choices that
I have, I will not be disappointed to put my name to the finished garments.
De Certeau mentions Ludwig Wittgenstein’s notions on
how the scientist must engage with the activity of common language (cited in
Michel de Certeau 1984, 9) in order to not be seen as an ‘expert’ who then
loses the respect of his community through the use of technical discourse. A
‘progressive’ living historian could be seen as falling into this intellectual
trap, as they are now doing living history more for the benefit of each other,
and not for the viewing public at large, though for the most part, the public
is still in attendance at events. The everyday practice of creating the
material culture for what we do use techniques and language that are no longer
common in society. We have to stop from time to time and examine how we can
better explain ourselves to the viewing public, which may also include other
living historians, and potentially even museum staff. This entry has hoped to
provide an overview of what I do that sets garment construction apart from
modern clothing construction. In the future posts, I hope to dig deeper into
each method to help better explain how they differ from modern techniques.
Terms:
Breeches - menswear, short pants that end just below
the knee. They are outerwear, but also are considered ‘undress’ attire in the
eighteenth century. Would never be worn alone, tradesmen could wear them with
just a shirt, stockings and shoes, if working, but in public company would also
wear a waistcoat and coat. Wearing just breeches, would be the modern
equivalent of wearing a pair of cut-off jeans that have seen better days to mow
the lawn.
Laundry - clothing in period would not have been
laundered as often as we do today. Outer layers, even if worn every day would
be spot cleaned and aired out at best. Laundry was saved for the body linens,
worn next to the skin. Shirts, shifts, under-drawers, stockings, are all items
that would be laundered. Also, modern techniques of machine washing are
horrible on historic garments. I have bought a top loading washing machine with
a delicates cycle that more closely resembles hand washing in a tub for this
very purpose. Almost everything we own is hun to dry, saving our modern
underpants, socks and T shirts. I rarely use our dryer. In period, these
breeches would be beaten daily to knock out the clay after they have dried. A
potter’s breeches would have been a disposable garment, usually replaced every
six months.
Wool vs. Linen, Soldier vs. Tradesman – In the
eighteenth century, many French troops wore wool uniforms, even in summer. They
were issued one uniform that would be expected to last for several years. The
only laundry the soldiers would have done is their shirts, under-drawers and
socks. Tradesmen on the other hand, are a class above the common soldier. They
would be able to afford to buy their own clothing, and would have work wear and
day wear that would be separate from each other. They would have owned more
clothing than a soldier in general. The wearing of white canvas waistcoat and
breeches, or ‘smallclothes’ as they are called, is very much the same as
wearing coveralls or Carhartts by tradesmen today. Easily laundered, cheaper to
replace than fancier woolen garments, and were expected to take a beating.
Later in the eighteenth century the wearing of leather breeches in the colonies
replaced the wearing of canvas breeches for many men. Leather is longer
wearing, more adaptable to the moving body, and easier to keep ‘clean’.
Clean – is a relative term, far different from today’s
idea of clean. Natural fibres in fabrics allow for garments to just be aired
out from time to time. The finishes of fabrics not washed out by commercial
machines also helped to repel dirt. A simple brushing is often all a garment
needs. Also, for the most part, people did not smell as bad as we imagine.
Polyester fibres hold on to moisture created by the body and trap it within the
garment to rot and create the smell we think of as ‘bad’. Natural fibres breath
better, getting rid of the moisture to allow the garment to stay cleaner
longer. The wearing and laundry of body linens helps to shield the clothing
from the body, but also to protect the body from excess build-up of oils and
skin cells that when rotting, cause us to smell.
Progressive - a relatively new form of living
historian who could be seen as being fanatical about the material culture, and
the history of the eighteenth century. These are the people who will undertake
a route march in the middle of the night in January to better understand the
mindset of their forefathers who had to march into battle in winter months.
Drifting Focus photography page has images of this year’s event here, http://www.driftingfocus.com/portfolio_page/the-occupation-of-the-jersies-peales-march-to-princeton/. They are also the type who will weave their own
cloth, spin their own thread, tan their own leather, just to get things
‘right’. Sound familiar? While I am considered to be a progressive, I, like
many of my peers, realize that there is still so much to learn. There will be
no resting back ‘doing things like we have always done things’ with this group.
The learning is the key focus of this group.
Bibliography
Michel de Certeau, translated by Steven F. Rendall.
1984. The Practices of Everyday Life. Berkeley and Los Angeles:
University of California Press.
Potvin, John. 2009. "Introduction: Inserting
Fashion Into Space." In The Places and Spaces of Fashion, 1800-2007,
by John Potvin, 1-18. New York: Routledge.
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