<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV" /><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<h3>I. THE STORY OF PERIOD COSTUMES</h3>
<h4><i>A Résumé</i></h4>
<div class="blockquot">
<p><span class="big">"<ANTIMG src="images/illus-o.jpg" width-obs="72" height-obs="60" alt=""O" /><b>UR</b></span>
present modes of dress (aside from the variations
imposed by fashion) are the resultant of all the fashions of
the last 2000 years."</p>
<p> <span class="smcap">W. G. Sumner</span> in <i>Folkways</i>.</p>
</div>
<p>The earliest Egyptian frescoes, invaluable pre-historic data, show us
woman as she was costumed, housed and occupied when the painting was
done. On those age-old walls she appears as man's companion, his
teacher, plaything, slave, and ruler;—in whatever rôle the fates
decreed. The same frescoed walls have pictured records of how Egypt
tilled the soil, built houses, worked in metals, pottery and sculpture.
Woman is seen beside her man, who slays the beasts, at times from boats
propelled through <SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></SPAN>reeded jungles; and hers is always that rigid
outline, those long, quiet eyes depicted in profile, with massive
head-dress, and strange upstanding ornaments, abnormally curled wig, and
close, straight garments to the feet (or none at all), heavy collar,
wristbands and anklets of precious metals with gems inset, or chased in
strange designs. About her, the calm mysterious poise and childlike
acquiescence of those who know themselves to be the puppets of the gods.
In this naïveté lies one of the great charms of Egyptian art.</p>
<p>As sculptured caryatide, we see woman of Egypt clad in transparent
sheath-like skirt, nude above the waist, with the usual extinguishing
head-dress and heavy collar, bracelets and anklets. We see her as woman,
mute, law-abiding, supporting the edifice; woman with steady gaze and
silent lips; one wonders what was in the mind of that lotus eater of the
Nile who carved his dream in stone.</p>
<p>Those would reproduce Egyptian colour schemes for costumes, house or
stage settings, would do well to consult the book of Egyptian designs,
brought out in 1878 by the Ecole des <SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></SPAN>Beaux Arts, Paris, and available
in the large libraries.</p>
<p>On the walls of the Necropolis of Memphis, Thi and his wife (Fifth
Dynasty) appear in a delightful hunting scene. The man in the prow of
his boat is about to spear an enormous beast, while his wife, seated in
the bottom, wraps her arm about his leg!</p>
<p>Among the earliest portraits of an Egyptian woman completely clothed, is
that of Queen Taia, wife of Amenophis, Eighteenth Dynasty, who wears a
striped gown with sleeves of the kimono type and a ribbon tied around
her waist, the usual ornamental collar and bracelets of gold, and an
elaborate head-dress with deep blue curtain, extending to the waist,
behind.</p>
<p>Full of illuminating suggestions is an example of Woman in Egyptian
decoration, to be seen as a fresco in the Necropolis of Thebes. It shows
the governess of a young prince (Eighteenth Dynasty) holding the child
on her lap. The feet of the little prince rest on a stool, supported by
nine crouching human beings—men; each has a collar about his neck, to
which a leash <SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></SPAN>is attached, and all nine leashes are held in the hands
of the child!</p>
<p>The illustrations of the Egyptian funeral papyrus, The Book of the Dead,
show woman in the rôle of wife and companion. It is the story of a
high-born Egyptian woman, Tutu, wife of Ani, Royal Scribe and Scribe of
the Sacred Revenue of all the gods of Thebes. Tutu, the long-eyed
Egyptian woman, young and straight, with raven hair and active form, a
Kemäit of Amon, which means she belonged to the religious chapter or
congregation of the great god of Thebes. She was what might be described
as lady-in-waiting or honorary priestess, to the god Amon. She, too,
wears the typical Egyptian head-dress and straight, long white gown,
hanging in close folds to her feet. One vignette shows Tutu with arm
about her husband's leg. This seems to have been a naïve Egyptian way of
expressing that eternal womanliness, that tender care for those beloved,
that quality inseparable from woman if worthy the name, and by reason of
which with man, her mate, she has run the gamut of human experience,
meeting the demands of her time. There <SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></SPAN>is no dodging the issue, woman's
story recorded in art, shows that she has always responded to Fate's
call; followed, led, ruled, been ruled, amused, instructed, sent her men
into battle as Spartan mothers did to return with honour or on their
shields, and when Fate so decreed, led them to battle, like Joan of Arc.</p>
<h4>II. EGYPT AND ASSYRIA</h4>
<p>In Egypt and Assyria the lines of the torso were kept straight, with no
contracting of body at waist line. Woman was clad in a straight
sheet-like garment, extending from waist to feet with only metal
ornaments above; necklace, bracelets and armlets; or a straight dress
from neck to meet the heavy anklets. Sandals were worn on the feet. The
head was encased in an abnormally curled wig, with pendent ringlets, and
the whole clasped by a massive head-dress, following the contour of head
and having as part of it, a curtain or veil, reaching down behind,
across shoulders and approaching waist line. The Sphinx wears a
characteristic Egyptian head-dress.</p>
<div class="block-illo"><h4>PLATE XIX<SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></SPAN></h4>
<p> <SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></SPAN>Mrs. Condé Nast, artist and patron of the arts, noted for
her understanding of her own type and the successful
costuming of it.</p>
<p> Mrs. Nast was Miss Clarisse Coudert. Her French blood
accounts, in part, for her innate feeling for line and
colour. It is largely due to the keen interest and active
services of Mrs. Nast that <i>Vogue</i> and <i>Vanity Fair</i> have
become the popular mirrors and prophetic crystal balls of
fashion for the American woman.</p>
<p> Mrs. Nast is here shown in street costume. The photograph is
by Baron de Meyer, who has made a distinguished art of
photography.</p>
<p> We are here shown the value of a carefully considered
outline which is sharply registered on the background by
posing figure against the light, a method for suppressing
all details not effecting the outline.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/illus_p179.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illus_p179-tb.jpg" width-obs="282" height-obs="400" alt="Mrs. Conde Nast in Street Dress" title="Mrs. Conde Nast in Street Dress" /></SPAN> <span class="caption"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></SPAN> <i>Photograph by Baron de Meyer</i><br/>
<i>Mrs. Condé Nast in Street Dress</i></span></div>
</div>
<h4><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></SPAN>III. EGYPT, BYZANTIUM, GREECE AND ROME</h4>
<p>During the periods antedating Christ, when the Roman empire was
all-powerful, the women of Egypt, Byzantium, Greece and Rome, wore
gilded wigs (see <SPAN href="#Page_vi">Plate I</SPAN>, Frontispiece), arranged in Psyche knots, and
banded; sandals on their feet, and a one-piece garment, confined at the
waist by a girdle, which fell in close folds to the feet, a style to
develop later into the classic Greek.</p>
<p>The Greek garment consisted of a great square of white linen, draped in
the deft manner of the East, to adapt it to the human form, at once
concealing and disclosing the body to a degree of perfection never since
attained. There were undraped Greek garments left to hang in close,
clinging folds, even in the classic period. It is this undraped and
finely-pleated robe (see <SPAN href="#Page_198">Plate XXI</SPAN>) hanging close to the figure, and the
two-piece garment (see <SPAN href="#Page_29">Plate IV</SPAN>) with its short tunic of the same
material, extending just below the waist line in front, and drooping in
a cascade of ripples at the sides, as low as the <SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></SPAN>knees, that Fortuny
(Paris) has reproduced in his tea gowns.</p>
<p>An Englishwoman told us recently that her great-great-grandmother used
to describe how she and others of her time (Empire Period) wet their
clothes to make them cling to their forms, à la Grecque!</p>
<p>The classic Greek costume was often a sleeveless garment, falling in
folds, and when confined at waist line with cord the upper part bloused
over it; the material was draped so as to leave the arms free, the folds
being held in place by ornamental clasps upon the shoulders. The fitting
was practically unaided by cutting; squares or straight lengths of linen
being adjusted to the human form by clever manipulation. The adjusting
of these folds, as we have said, developed into an art.</p>
<p>The use of large squares or shawls of brilliantly dyed linen, wool and
later silk, is conspicuous in all the examples showing woman as
decoration.</p>
<p>The long Gothic cape succeeds it, that enveloping circular garment, with
and without the hood, and clasped at the throat, in which the <SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></SPAN>Mother of
God is invariably depicted. Her cape is the celestial royal blue.</p>
<p>The stained silk gauzes, popular with Greek dancers, were made into
garments following the same classic lines, and so were the gymnasium
costumes of the young girls of Greece. Isadora Duncan reproduces the
latter in many of her dances.</p>
<p>In the chapter entitled "The Story of Textiles" in <i>The Art of Interior
Decoration</i>, we have given a résumé of this branch of our subject.</p>
<p>The type of costume worn by woman throughout the entire Roman Empire
during its most glorious period, was classic Greek, not only in general
outline, but in detail. Note that the collarless neck was cut round and
a trifle low; the lines of gown were long and followed each other; the
trimming followed the hem of neck and sleeves and skirt; the hair, while
artificially curled and sometimes intertwined with pearls and other
gems, after being gilded, was so arranged as to show the contour of the
head, then gathered into a Psyche knot. Gold bands, plain or jewelled,
clasped and held the hair in place.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></SPAN>In the Gold Room of the Metropolitan Museum; in noted collections in
Europe; in portraits and costume plates, one sees that the earrings worn
at that period were great heavy discs, or half discs, of gold; large
gold flowers, in the Etruscan style; large rings with groups of
pendants,—usually three on each ring, and the drop earrings so much in
vogue to-day.</p>
<p>Necklaces were broad, like collars, round and made of hand-wrought links
and beads, with pendants. These filled in the neck of the dress and were
evidently regarded as a necessary part of the costume.</p>
<p>The simple cord which confined the Greek woman's draperies at the waist,
in Egypt and Byzantium, became a sash; a broad strip of material which
was passed across the front of body at the waist, crossed behind and
then brought tight over the hips to tie in front, low down, the ends
hanging square to knees or below.</p>
<p>In Egypt a shoulder cape, with kerchief effect in front, broadened
behind to a square, and reached to the waist line.</p>
<p>We would call attention to the fact that when the classic type of
furniture and costume were <SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></SPAN>revived by Napoleon I and the Empress
Josephine, it was the Egyptian version, as well as the Greek. One sees
Egyptian and Etruscan styles in the straight, narrow garment of the
First Empire reaching to ankles, with parallel rows of trimming at the
bottom of skirt.</p>
<p>The Empire style of parted hair, with cascade of curls each side,
riotous curling locks outlining face, with one or two ringlets brought
in front of ears, and the Psyche knot (which later in Victorian days
lent itself to caricature, in a feather-duster effect at crown of head),
were inspired by those curled and gilded creations such as Thaïs wore.</p>
<p>Hats, as we use the term to-day, were worn by the ancients. Some will
remember the Greek hat Sibyl Sanderson wore with her classic robes when
she sang Massenet's "Phédre," in Paris. It was Chinese in type. One sees
this type of hat on Tanagra Statuettes in our museums.</p>
<p>Apropos of hats, designers to-day are constantly resurrecting models
found in museums, and some of us recognise the lines and details of
ancient head-dresses in hats turned out by our most up-to-date
milliners.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></SPAN>Parasols and umbrellas were also used by Assyrians and Greeks. Sandals
which only covered the soles of the feet were the usual footwear, but
Greeks and Etruscans are shown in art as wearing also moccasin-like
boots and shoes laced up the front.</p>
<p>Of course, the strapped slippers of the Empire were a version of classic
sandals.</p>
<p>As we have said, the Greek gown and toga are found wherever the Roman
Empire reached. The women of what are now France and England clothed
themselves at that time in the same manner as the cultured class of
Rome. Naturally the Germanic branch which broke from the parent stem,
and drifted northward to strike root in unbroken forests, bordering on
untried seas, wore skins and crudely woven garments, few and strongly
made, but often picturesque.</p>
<p>Though but slightly reminiscent of the traditional costume, we know that
the women of the third and fourth centuries wore a short, one-piece
garment, with large earrings, heavy metal armlets above the elbow and at
wrists. The chain about the waist, from which hung a knife, for
protection and domestic purposes, is descendent from the savage's cord
and ancestor to that lovely bauble, the chatelaine of later days, with
its attached fan, snuff-box and jewelled watch.</p>
<div class="block-illo"><h4>PLATE XX<SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></SPAN></h4>
<p> <SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></SPAN>Mrs. Condé Nast in an evening gown. Here again is a costume
the beauty of which evades the dictum of fashion in the
narrow sense of the term.</p>
<p> This picture has the distinction of a well-posed and finely
executed old master and because possessing beauty of a
traditional sort will continue to give pleasure long after
the costume has perished.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/illus_p189.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illus_p189-tb.jpg" width-obs="384" height-obs="400" alt="Mrs. Conde Nast in Evening Dress" title="Mrs. Conde Nast in Evening Dress" /></SPAN> <span class="caption"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></SPAN> <i>Mrs. Condé Nast in Evening Dress</i></span></div>
</div>
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