Exhibitions/ Death Becomes Her

Death Becomes Her: A Century of Mourning Attire

At The Met Fifth Avenue
October 21, 2014–February 1, 2015

Exhibition Overview

This Costume Institute exhibition explores the aesthetic development and cultural implications of mourning fashions of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Approximately thirty ensembles, many of which are being exhibited for the first time, reveal the impact of high-fashion standards on the sartorial dictates of bereavement rituals as they evolved over a century.

The thematic exhibition is organized chronologically and features mourning dress from 1815 to 1915, primarily from The Costume Institute's collection, including mourning gowns worn by Queen Victoria and Queen Alexandra. The calendar of bereavement's evolution and cultural implications is illuminated through women's clothing and accessories, showing the progression of appropriate fabrics from mourning crape to corded silks, and the later introduction of color with shades of gray and mauve.

The Anna Wintour Costume Center's Carl and Iris Barrel Apfel Gallery orients visitors to the exhibition with fashion plates, jewelry, and accessories. The main Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Gallery illustrates the evolution of mourning wear through high-fashion silhouettes. Examples of restrained simplicity are shown alongside those with ostentatious ornamentation. The predominantly black clothes are set off against a stark white background and amplified with historic photographs and daguerreotypes.

See a slideshow of gallery views.


Featured Media

 

"...a perfect little black cocktail dress of a show..."—Vanity Fair

"For fantasists of all stripes, the show will not disappoint."—The Cut, NYMag.com

"...the exhibit is, in a word, elegant."—MTV.com

"I sincerely wish I could shop the Met's latest exhibition...Talk about a show tailor made for New Yorkers."—V Magazine


On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in


Mourning ensemble (detail), ca. 1870. American. Silk. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Martha Woodward Weber, 1930 (2009.300.633a–c)