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Learning PlanSessionsContributors
 The Spectacle of Dress in Victorian Painting
 Fathom
Seminar Introduction
[Derby
(c) Tate, London 2001

The mid-nineteenth century in Britain was a time of invention and experimentation with new technologies and textile processes, allowing the manufacture of a range and diversity of clothing not previously seen. Victorian painters depicted dress in a variety of significant ways. Dress indicated its wearer's social position and moral stature, and artists of the time were quick to understand this fact and use it to convey messages about the subjects of their paintings.

The Victorian painters William Powell Frith, Ford Madox Brown and William Maw Egley each devoted lavish attention to the details of dress in their works, but with quite different motivations, often based on their own political and social attitudes.

In this seminar, based on a paper delivered at the "Locating the Victorians" conference, Christiana Payne, lecturer in art history at Oxford Brookes University, offers a comparative analysis of three Victorian paintings that contain fascinating representations of dress: Frith's Derby Day, Brown's Work, and Egley's Omnibus Life in London. Payne analyses both the works and their creators to reveal the various ways in which dress was important to Victorians and those who portrayed them.




Learning Objectives
  • Compare and contrast different styles used by Victorian painters in their depiction of dress. 
  • Identify the messages that dress styles might have conveyed to the Victorian public about the social and moral standing of their wearers. 
  • Explain the way in which technological advances in clothing manufacture impacted upon social and artistic interpretations of dress. 
  • Describe how painting could be used to challenge stereotypes about the significance of dress.
  • Analyse how dress might be used as a vehicle for fetishistic and voyeuristic desires.


Sessions

Session 1 Spectacular Dress in Art and Society
Session 2 A Day at the Races
Session 3 Challenging Stereotypes
Session 4 Leather and Lace
Contributors


Credits
This seminar is adapted from a lecture that was presented at the Locating the Victorians Conference, hosted by the Science Museum, London, in July 2001. Copyright Christiana Payne.



Technical Requirements
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