Fashion Institute of Technology
The Museum at FIT, founded in 1969 as the Design Laboratory, includes collections of clothing, textiles, and accessories.It began presenting exhibitions in the 1970s, utilizing a collection on long-term loan from the Brooklyn Museum of Art, and then over time acquiring its own collection as well as thousands of textiles and other fashion-related material. In 1993, the Board of Trustees of FIT, noting the significance of the Design Laboratory's collections and exhibitions, changed the institution's name to The Museum at FIT. In 2012, the museum was awarded accreditation by the American Alliance of Museums.
The museum's permanent collection now includes more than 50,000 garments and accessories from the 18th century to the present. Important designers such as Adrian, Balenciaga, Chanel, and Dior are represented. The collecting policy of the museum focuses on aesthetically and historically significant clothing, accessories, textiles and visual materials, with emphasis on contemporary avant-garde fashion.
There are three galleries in the museum. The lower level gallery is devoted to special exhibitions. The Fashion and Textile History Gallery on the main floor features a rotating selection of approximately 200 historically and artistically significant objects from the museum's permanent collection. Gallery FIT, also located on the main floor, is dedicated to student and faculty exhibitions.
Past exhibitions include: ''London Fashion,'' which received the first Richard Martin Award for Excellence in Costume Exhibitions from The Costume Society of America, ''The Corset: Fashioning the Body,'' and ''Gothic: Dark Glamour.'' Other special exhibitions have included ''Isabel Toledo: Fashion From the Inside Out,'' in which the inauguration day ensemble Isabel Toledo designed for Michelle Obama in 2008 was on display, and a look at sustainable fashion with ''Eco-Fashion: Going Green,'' an exhibition from 2010 examining the past two centuries of fashion's good—and bad—environmental and ethical practices.
More than 100,000 people visit the Museum at FIT each year, attending exhibitions, lectures, and other events. Admission is free to the public.
Fashion historian Valerie Steele became director of the Museum in 2003, and has also been named chief curator. Provided by Wikipedia
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1by Fashion Institute of Technology
Published 1995
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4by Martin, Richard (Richard Harrison), Martin, Richard (Richard Harrison), Martin, Richard“...Fashion Institute of Technology (New York, N.Y.)...”
Published 1990
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13by Steele, Valerie, Steele, Valerie, Albinson, A. Cassandra, Albinson, A. Cassandra, Blaszczyk, Regina Lee, Blaszczyk, Regina Lee, Grisard, Dominique, Grisard, Dominique, Landis, Deborah Nadoolman, Landis, Deborah Nadoolman, Melendez-Escalante, Tanya, Melendez-Escalante, Tanya, Monden, Masafumi, Monden, Masafumi“...Fashion Institute of Technology (New York, N.Y.) Museum...”
Published 2018
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15Published 1981“...Fashion Institute of Technology (New York, N.Y.)...”
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20by Beene, Geoffrey, 1927-“...Fashion Institute of Technology (New York, N.Y.)...”
Published 1994
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