A new South Korean Mulberry Bags Outlet museum will be a shrine dedicated to the handbag
Posted by Dallas Dallas on Saturday, July 14, 2012
Under: mulberry bags
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buy additional rights. an upmarket district of Seoul where designer stores line the
leafy boulevards, “It” bags are an obvious declaration of South Korea’s love
affair with all things luxury. For proof look no further than Asia’s first
museum dedicated to handbags, opening on July 19. Built by the Seoul-based
luxury bag producer Simone, the Simone Handbag Museum is part of a new 10-floor
building called Bagstage, in the shape of a top handle shopper and dedicated to
the accessory. It houses a shop selling bag materials; workshops where new
Korean designers can work rent-free; a section where craftsmen will produce
bags; and two shops, including a new multi-brand handbag store from Simone,
which will also sell the company’s new bag line, 0914. However, the museum
itself goes well beyond designer arm candy, looking back over 500 years to
explore the origins of the accessory. More IN STYLE Power dressing Brad Thor
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“Handbags and accessories have usually played only a supporting role in fashion
exhibitions, ” says Dr Valerie Steele, director and chief curator for the museum
at FIT. “It is terrific news that there is a new handbag museum in Korea. I look
forward to seeing it because fashions in handbags have changed dramatically over
time. ” Simone founder and chief executive Kenny Park says: “People are always
asking me about the history of bags. I came up with the idea of having a
professional museum where people can see the past and the future of handbags. I
wanted the east meets west version but there was not enough material available
in Asia so for now we have half of the world represented. ” The museum isn’t the
only cultural shrine to accessories – there is the Tassenmuseum or Museum of
Bags and Purses in Amsterdam, the Bata Shoe Museum in Toronto and the Ferragamo
museum in Florence. However, not only is this the only one actually shaped like
a bag but Simone has spent about £1m acquiring the collection. The most
expensive item is a red alligator skin Birkin from 1998 (£40, 000) while an art
nouveau, flower motif, gold change purse from Boucheron (1880) costs $40, 000.
Indeed, the 300 bags, selected with a focus on western history, show an
intriguing diversity .Mulberry
Bayswater Outlet. The earliest exhibit is a knitted purse from
1550, made of silk, metal and thread. There are also sweetmeat purses, which
were used to carry sachets to mask body odours, as well as purses, pockets,
bourses, pouches and aumonieres – small leather drawstring purses or alms purses
– totes, clutches, and vanity cases. The collection ends with a Céline tote from
spring/summer 2012. A Hermès Birkin 1998 The museum, which has a historical
gallery, a contemporary gallery and one for temporary shows, was put together by
Judith Clark, who is a reader in fashion and museology at the London College of
Fashion and has curated exhibitions such as Spectres (MoMu 2004, V&A 2005),
Anna Piaggi: Fashion-ology (V&A 2006) and Diana Vreeland: After Diana
Vreeland (Palazzo Fortuny Venice 2012). Bespoke mannequins – two of which were
made by milliner Stephen Jones – focus on gesture and drawing the eye towards
the bag. “What’s new here are the mannequins, ” Clark says. “Bags contextualise
gesture. Gesture is specific to time .Mulberry Bags
Outlet. Think of the crunched shoulder. ” The collection also
reveals the way in which holding habits have changed: bags that women could
carry between their fingers or over their arms first became popular after
fashions changed at the time of the French Revolution, around 1790. In the
historical gallery, objects are displayed in dark wood-framed cupboards that
evoke Victorian cabinets of curiosities, alongside mannequins and drawers: some
containing lingerie bags that belonged to Queen Marie of Hanover. On the
mannequins, pieces include a belt bag from circa 1870, made in blue velvet and
silver carvings, and a British embroidered pocket from 1760. A silver-and-pearl
needle case, circa 1900, belonged to the Argentine socialite María Luisa Unzué
de Aldao and was purchased in New york for £27, 000. On the contemporary floor,
bags displayed on white powder-coated shelves and presented in tissue-lined grey
boxes include Alexander McQueen’s 2010 leather Union Jack clutch; a Martin
Margiela glove bag, on loan from MoMu in Antwerp; a Prada rucksack from the
1980s; and, from 1910, a coin purse in silver-plated nickel. A British muff bag
from the 1950s is made from astrakhan, suede and plastic, and a 1970s clutch
resembles a rolled up magazine. Then, pushing the boundaries of what can really
be considered a handbag, is a cardboard box with a string designed to contain a
British gas mask. Clark says, “If Fashion Bags reflect back to our basic needs – ‘what
we cannot leave the house without, ’ – then this is a very poignant illustration
of a different essential need. All bags are really boxes on a string and this
makes it literal. By being included it questions what purpose the others are
serving. ” Park says: “My hope is that anyone who is interested in fashion,
especially handbags, will leave the museum with a handbag in their hearts... or
on their arm. ”
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