Emperor Haileselassie’s gift to Jacky Kennedy among fashion items in New York

By Jan Paschal | September 13, 2010



• On display also is Emperor Haileselassie’s gift to Jackie Kennedy in 1962: a gold handbag.

NEW YORK, Sept 13 (Reuters Life!) – Fashion may be for
followers but style is original is the message of a new exhibit
which gives a glimpse into the closets of 81 women who made
their mark on Manhattan.

“Notorious & Notable: 20th Century Women of Style,” which
opens on Tuesday during New York Fashion Week, includes
fashions and jewels worn by glamorous newsmakers such as
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and stripper Gypsy Rose Lee.

“We’re not saying who is notorious and who is notable,”
said Judith Price, president of the National Jewelry Institute,
which collaborated on the exhibit. “We’re leaving that up to
the beholder.”

But she added that the exhibit at the Museum of the City of
New York honors “women who put their thumbprint on New York
fashion.”

In addition to fashion icons, the exhibit also pays homage
to women who were prominent in society, politics, business and
the arts and who represent New York’s history and cultural
diversity.

A turn-of-the-century black silk gown worn by the wife of
J.P. Morgan Jr. is shown across the runway from Congresswoman
Bella Abzug’s floppy hat and early 1970s maxi coat.

“Style is simple. You wear it. It doesn’t wear you,”
explained New York designer Jackie Rogers, whose clients
included Kennedy Onassis.

Designer Norman Norell’s sundress for 1960s consumer
advocate Betty Furness and singer Marian Anderson’s 1941 gold
concert gown with feathers are also featured in the show.

“These are the show stoppers,” Price said. “Here’s the gold
handbag that Haile Selassie gave to Jackie, which she should
have given back,” she added, referring the gift from the former
emperor of Ethiopia to the then first lady.

Jewelry is also featured prominently with designer Carolina
Herrera’s blue topaz earrings and legendary Vogue editor Diana
Vreeland’s jeweled gold Tiffany pin on display.

Art collector Corice Canton Arman explained the story
behind her 18-karat gold cuff bracelet with violins and horns
done in rubies made by her late husband, the French-born artist
Armand Pierre Fernandez.

“Arman used string instruments,” she said. “For him, they
were reminiscent of the female body.”

Phyllis Magidson, the museum’s curator of costumes and
textiles, said there was an art to wearing clothes such as
model Betsy Pickering’s 1970s black Halston gown with plunging
V neckline.

“You had to have extremely good posture. If you rounded
your shoulders, everything would pop out.”
(Reporting by Jan Paschal; Editing by Patricia Reaney)


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