|
Théâtre
de la Mode
Fashion Dolls: The Survival of Haute
Couture
REVISED SECOND EDITION
ISBN 0-935278-56-7
List price: $29.95
192 Pages
8 1/2" x 11"
Photos of all the sets, both 1940s originals and 1990 re-creations
Catalog of color photos of 170 miniature mannequins, including
close-ups.
Full color 32-page section of David Seidner's fashion photos
Plus, over 90 black & white historical photos
Introduction by Susan Train, Condé
Nast Publications Paris Bureau Chief
Essays by Edmonde Charles-Roux, Herbert R. Lottman, Stanley
Garfinkel, Nadine Gasc,
David Seidner, Colleen Schafroth and Betty Long-Schleif.
|
|

Théâtre
de la Mode takes you to Paris, France, in the 1940s where you
feel the emotions and realities of the war. A series of historical
essays tell the story of couturiers, set designers, milliners,
shoe and glove makers, jewelry designers and other artisans
joining together to create a show of their fashions in miniature.
Nina Ricci’s son Robert first conceived the idea as a way to
showcase Paris’ fashion industry while raising money for war
victims. The 27" tall dolls and their sets toured major
cities of Europe and the United States, beginning in Paris and
ending in 1946 in San Francisco. There, after the exhibit closed,
jewels worn by the dolls were sent back to France, the sets were
presumably destroyed, and the dolls disappeared into storage in
the basement of the City of Paris Department Store. Rescued in
1952, the dolls were donated to a new museum, Maryhill Museum of
Art in southern Washington.
The original book was written for the 1990
opening of the exhibit of the "lost dolls." After
Stanley Garfinkel, a professor from Kent State University, first
discovered their existence and they were sent back to Paris for
renovation, the sets were rebuilt and the show opened at its
original location, the Pavillon Marsan at the Louvre. The book was
translated to English when the exhibition opened at the
Metropolitan Muesum of Art in New York, but has been out of print
since 1991.

Now, for the First Time, Lovers of
Couture
Can See Enlarged Photos of all Existing
Mannequins and Large Color
Photos of the Sets!
Pati Palmer has loved the dolls since visiting
them at Maryhill as a young girl. She has introduced them again
and again to attendees of The Palmer/Pletsch Couture Workshop, who
have been visiting the dolls at Maryhill since the mid-1990s.
While there, she learned that Maryhill had hopes of resurrecting
the book and Palmer/Pletsch, being a publisher, decided to do
it...if the new version could be an enhancement of the old by
including photos of the re-built sets and larger photos of the 170
dolls so designers and sewers could see the details. This new book
has all that and more. Recent history has
been added including the licensing by the Tonner Doll Co. of
re-creations of some of the Théâtre
outfits on their limited edition dolls.
Théâtre
de la Mode was adopted by the United Federation of Doll
Clubs
for their 2002 convention in Denver, Colorado.
If you love couture, check this book:

|