Celebrating their 25th anniversary season, Shotgun Players will be presenting Hamlet opening March 31st. Looks like another great production idea, as the actors will not know what part they will play until 5 minutes before showtime.
Category Archives: Events
One of The Greatest English Painters of the Nineteenth Century
The current exhibit at the De Young Museum is a rare opportunity to see a total of 60 magnificent works by J.M.W. Turner.
This exhibit will be there until September 20th.
(Worth the effort to go into San Francisco)!
Be sure to read this link: http://deyoung.famsf.org/turner
DO NOT MISS THE CURRENT EXHIBIT AT THE LEGION OF HONOR: It was wonderful!
This current exhibit has a perfect range and amount (not too many and not too little) of clothing that represents the often neglected history of important American designers. Most of the designers included in this exhibit changed the course of not only how American women dressed, but also influenced European designers as well. High Style: The Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection
Check Out Suzy Menkes Article
Click Here to read this fascinating article on a new exhibition of Italian fashion!
My Fall 2014 Newsletter
Filed under Articles, Books, Events, Fashion, Newsletters
It’s Not Too Late If You Missed Charles James
For those of you that did not have the opportunity to see one of the Metropolitan Museum of New York’s costume Institute’s most highly attended and successful exhibit, Charles James (see review), take heart because he is one of many other important American designers that is going to be included in a new exhibit coming to San Francisco (March 14 – July 19, 2015) called High Style: The Brooklyn Museum of Costume Collection.
This special exhibit will display some of Charles James’s brilliant creations, as well as original sketches and pro-type muslins that reveal the details of his masterfully executed gowns. These examples are all part of the exhibit’s theme, which traces the evolution of fashion from 1920 to 1980. Special attention is made to the pioneering American women designers working in the 1930s and 1940s, such as Bonnie Cashin, Elizabeth Hawes, and Claire McCardell, and their male counterparts, including Norman Norell, Mainbocher, and Gilbert Adrian. This upcoming exhibit is destined to be a huge success, especially in the sense that many of the most brilliant American designers of this period are largely unknown to those outside of the fashion world.