Global Music Residency - gamin (Woodwind Musician)
Global Music Residency welcomes prominent NYC soloist & former principal player of the National Gugak Orchestra, gamin.
gamin tours performing traditional Korean music alongside experimenting with cross-disciplinary collaborations, including the Silk Road Ensemble.
gamin plays the 피리 piri (double reed Korean oboe), the 태평소 taepyeonso (double-reed horn), and the 생황 saenghwang (mouth organ).
Check out her website @ https://www.gaminmusic.com/
Residency Events
Lecture-Recital | M. 2/21 at 8:15pm, Ware |
Learn to Play Korean Traditional Instruments | M. 2/21 - TH. 2/24 at 12-2pm, MWAT Lobby |
Recital in collaboration with WCU Faculty and Students | TH. 2/24 at 8:15pm, Ware |
Contemplative Music of Korea, WCU Center for Contemplative Studies | W. 2/23 at 4:30-5:45pm |
Presser Music Library - Top Left Image: Emma Rolecki, Caleb Sharp, and Malaika Paralkar. The books on display were curated by one of our Presser Library student interns, Hannah Shields (not pictured).
Presser Music Library Highlights
Stop down to Presser Music Library to view a student-curated book display on Lunar New Year in Asia!
You can also join in making your own paper lantern! We have set up a craft table for your making of a New Year’s Paper Lantern. We encourage you to make these paper lanterns and place them along the window sill. We also have some coloring pages (Lunar New Year-themed) that you can color and hang anywhere in Presser.
For more resources, on our webpage (https://library.wcupa.edu/music) we’ve created a list of some book and score resources, under the tab “Celebrate Lunar New Year” on the left.
FHG Highlights
Enjoy these selected books exploring other dimensions of Korean culture.
Undiscovered Art from the Korean War | The Record of the Black Dragon Year | Libraries in Korea | The Columbia Anthology of Modern Korean Poetry | Traditional Performing Arts of Korea | Korean Mask Dance | KOREA Art and Archaeology | SILLA Korea’s Golden Kingdom
Revolutionary Fashion in the 18th Century (and WCU Special Collections)
By Allison Magerr
Special Collections student worker Allison Magerr delves into fashion during the French Revolution, analyzing the evolution of styles and depictions of them in the Costume Plates of our WPA Collection. ~ Jenna Bossert
Title : Ah ! Quelle antiquité ! ! ! _ Oh ! Quelle folie que la nouveauté..... : [estampe] / Chataignier inv. sc.
Author : Chataignier, Alexis (1772-1817). Graveur
Publisher : (A Paris)
Publication date : 1797
Throughout much of the 18th century, the essentials of fashion remained the same. Of course, there were changes (a robe volante looks nothing like a robe à la polonaise), but there was a general look I’m sure we’re all familiar with: ¾ sleeves, sacque-backed gowns, lace, and ruffles, etc. Towards the end of the century though, fashion changed dramatically, with the French Revolution (1789-1799) playing a large part in this shift.
During this period, a more natural body shape came into style; stays (corsets) went from being fully-boned to half-boned [7] and the bust area was given a “pigeon-breasted” look with strategically placed ruffles and/or fichus. [8] This silhouette was popular from the 1780s to the mid-1790s, until another shift began to occur. This change saw the waistline getting higher, until it rested under the bust. Because of this new position of the waist, the traditional, conical shape of stays (fig. 3) from the previous era did not work as well. The earlier style of stays compressed the breasts, but the new fashionable shape had them in a fuller and more natural position. [9] In response to this, a transitional style of stays appeared (figs. 4, 5).
This new style of stays features separate cups for the breasts and does not focus on shaping the stomach area, as that would be hidden under skirts. There are many different variations of these transitional stays. Figure 4
retains the tabs of the previous version and laces up the front and back, whereas Figure 5 loses the tabs, has no back lacing and the front fastens with lacing and buckles.
This period of fashion is called Directoire. It is named after the French Directory government, which lasted from 1795 to about 1800. [10] This look was completely different from anything else in the 18th century. While my focus here is more specific to France, this style was popular throughout Europe and America, with some regional variations. [11] Directoire clothing was known for being very drapey, with white dresses that had yards of fine fabric gathered up for the skirts. This era was all about rejecting the structured formal clothing and the brightly colored fabrics of the former aristocracy, instead of adopting lightweight, white dresses. [12]
This style was very inspired by the idea of what ancient Greek and Roman dress looked like, as can be seen in figure 6. Colorful shawls were a popular accessory [13], as well as reticules (little handbags), which replaced the pockets that had previously been tied around the waist in the previous decades. [14] Since these new skirts were much narrower and more sheer, and the waistline so raised, the old style of pockets simply did not work with the new silhouette.
Obviously, that man did not much care for the new fashions. That was by no means an unpopular opinion, as this new style was unlike anything seen before. The dresses were made of lightweight fabric and clung to women’s bodies and were often quite sheer. Some daring fashionistas in Paris left their shoulders bare, and ditched their petticoats and stays, leaving not much left for the imagination. [17] Though those extreme versions of this fashion were not universal, satirists drew many exaggerated caricatures to mock the new mode. [18]
In Special Collections, we have a collection of hand-painted fashion plates (figs. 7, 8), that artists created for the Work Projects Administration (WPA) Pennsylvania Extension. The WPA was created during the Great Depression to create more job opportunities [19]. These fashion plates are not the most historically accurate, especially in their little details, but they are a good illustration of the drastic change of silhouette over the course of around 6 years. (Please note that though the plates label the Directoire Period as 1789-1800, it started in 1795).
The last decades of the 1700s were quite literally a revolutionary time period. As such, the fashion of this time also followed this revolutionary trend. Starting with the chemise à la reine, and ending with the Directoire style, fashion became something, unlike anything 18th-century people had seen before. Though opinions on it were mixed, it was an important style that ultimately played a part in the evolution of fashion that led to what we wear today.
Footnotes
1780-1789, FIT Fashion History Timeline, fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu
Le Costume, vol. 4- Louis XVI- Directoire by Jacques Ruppert, page 29
1780-1789, FIT Fashion History Timeline, fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu
The Writer’s Guide to Costume: 18th Century Gown Closures, mimicofmodes.com
A Stitch in Time, season 1 episode 6
The Chemise à la Reine, thefashionhistorian.com
500 Years of Women’s Corsets, Stays, and Bras: A Dress Historian Explains Bustlines and Necklines, by Abby Cox, YouTube
Magasin des Modes Nouvelles Françaises et Anglaises, 11 février 1789 edition, page 58
500 Years of Women’s Corsets, Stays, and Bras: A Dress Historian Explains Bustlines and Necklines, by Abby Cox on YouTube
Directory, Encyclopedia Britannica
Parisian Milliner’s Advice in 1801 to a Visiting Lady: Regency Fashion, janeaustensworld.com
Directoire Style Fashion of Women 1795-1800, hisour.com
1790-1799, FIT Fashion History Timeline, fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu
The History of Underclothes, by C. Willett and Phillis Cunnington, page 74
Directoire Style Fashion of Women 1795-1800, hisour.com
The History of Underclothes, by C. Willett and Phillis Cunnington, page 71
Directoire Style Fashion of Women 1795-1800, hisour.com
Parisian Milliner’s Advice in 1801 to a Visiting Lady: Regency Fashion, janeaustensworld.com
Museum Extension Project Costume Plates, 1940-1943, Archives of American Art, aaa.si.edu
1790-1799, FIT Fashion History Timeline, fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu
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