As
we step in the new millenium,let's indulge in little
bit of retrospection,the key moments in fashion,triggered
by various socioeconomic movements during the twentieth
century.For what we know of the history of fashion
until the end of the 19th century,it was mostly
a fascinating footnote to the history of art. Much
has changed and evolved in the history of fashion
in the 1900's.It's a stirring,exotic trip with detours
aplenty-from the Fallper girls of the '20s in their
Channel dresses to the sheer elegance of Maharani
Gayatri Devi's pastel chiffon sarees,to the innocent
candy coloured can can dresses of the '50s Americana
to the dark,stylish paired down dressing of the
'90.
When
the century dawned,fashion was an exclusive enterprise,the
pursuit of the wealth.The lower tiers of the society
settled for garments that were more often than not
entirely family hand-made-downs or stitched at home.With
time, however,networks of neighbourhood tailors
began to evolve into a retail history and the boom
followed by boutique selling.Today,garments are
laser cut by computers and sourced from all over
the world and can easily be bought sitting in the
comfort of one's home via the internet.
Each decade of this century ushered greater progress."During
the '20s,one of the greatest influences on dress
code was the movement towards equal status for women.Hence,
a new breed of business-like women emerged and made
corresponding demands on their dress,says A.K.G
Nair,Director,Pearl Academy of Fashion."The obvious
choice for silhouette veered towards dropwaist or
box and the choice of colour was black and grey
and the fabrics preferred were silk and georgettes."he
says.
"In
India,the fashion scenario was in confusion as it
was a turbulent period of conflicting ideologies,when
the consciousness of an Indian national identity
was beginning to find political expression and the
struggle for Indian independence was getting momentum,"says
fashion diya Ritu Kumar.Thus the fashion trends
within high society,read the loyalty,was strongly
influenced by the British with the result that western
clothes became a status symbol.
The '30s heralded the idea of socialism,communism
and fascism and women's fashion became more and
more feminine in keeeping with conservative ideas."However
this period also saw the emergence of the vamp and
the culture of cabaret,"says Nair,noting that hence
the dresses became more body hugging and the colours
deep and dark in tune with such themes.
The
establishment of the Indian cinema also proved to
be the strongest influence on the fashion in the
decade.Due to the western influence,the use of angarkhas,choghas
and jamas diminished considerably by this time,although
the ceremonial pagri,safa and topi were widespread
as ever."They had been replaced by the chapkan,achkan
and sherwani,which are still standard items of formal
dress for Indian men today,"says Kumar.
"The
women even though were accepting change,continued
to wear their peshwaz,kurtas,ghaghras and odhnis
at religious and ceremonial festivities,sometimes
using imported fabrics but using mostly traditional
handwoven fabrice,"says Asha Baxi,Director,Fashion
Design.,National Institute of Fashion Technology(NIFT).
In the '40s,it was Christian Dior who turned fashion
upside down with a new shape,with the bosom pushed
up and out,a pinched waist and hips emphasised with
short fluted jackets."It was also a decade marked
by the second World War and the ensuing independence
ofr India with the result that women's clothing
was simple and functional,"says Nair.
The
'50s saw the dawn of art colleges and schools,which
became places of rebel,and hence in silhouette,narrow
waist and balloon skirts with bouncing patterns
were in vogue.Also due to the freedom struggle and
the espousal of khadi by Gandhiji,khadi garments
became a rage giving a boost to the sagging handloom
industry,according to Asha Baxi.
The '60s one of the most shock-filled decades of
the century,saw sweeping fashion and lifestyle changes
that reflected the mercurial passions of the times."This
decade was full of defiance and celebration in arts
and music and cinema,marked by a liberation from
constraints and new types of materials such as plastic
film and coated polyester fabric got popular,"says
Nair.Besides,adds Bax,"Tight kurtas and churidars
and high coiffers competed with the mini-skirts
abroad and at the same time,designers understood
the need of the moment to launch cheaper,ready-to-wear
lines.
"One of the most "revisited" and "retro" periods
in the fashion,the '70s is often called the 'me
decade'."It saw the beginning of "anything goes"
culture with the result that fashion became another
form of self-expression and bold colours with flower
prints were adapted in tunics,with shirts and bell-bottoms,"says
designer Manav Gangwani.As drug culture became a
mass phenomenon,psychedelic colours were garish,the
shoes were tall and hazardous and silhouettes were
extreme and the dressing of the '50s was definitely
out.
"The 70s also saw the export of traditional material
with the result that export surplus was sold within
the country itself and hence,international fashion
came to India much before the MTV culture," says
Baxi.Synthetics became popular and the disco culture
had a profound influence on fashion and the clothes
became as flashy as the mirrored ball that spins
over the dancers.
In
the '80s the big money ruled.It was the era of self
consciousness and American designers like Calvin
Klein became household names.In India too,silhouettes
became more masculine and the salwar kameez was
made with shoulder pads.Says Baxi,"Power dressing
and corporate look became dominant dress code."The
influence of cable TV became more prominent and
the teenage market boomed with youngsters going
in for the trendy look,which in turn influenced
the elders.
The '90s the last decade of the millenium,was one
of the extremes.Th excess of the early decade gave
way to the drastic pairing down and stripping away
in the hands of German designers like Helmut Lang
and Jil Sander."Perhaps the biggest fashion news
of the '90s has been the ascendancy of the younger
generation of designers into the mainstream.The
decade also looked for independent women with comforts,poise
and comnfidence as key features,"says Nair.
But
the decade also saw the revival of ethnicity with
films too becoming more discreet and launching a
"back to ethnic" look.While on the one hand the
new drive for information technology popularised
the corporate look,an ethno-cultural revival made
people again go back to the traditional forms of
art and crafts.States Baxi,"As it is Indian fashion
is extremely alive and whatever the decade or the
century,it is here to stay.For not only it is comfortable,practical
and aesthetically beautiful but has changed with
time with the result that it has,in the past century,and
will in the coming one,remain contemporary,"she
sums up.
Which is why the start of the new century tempts
us to dream and remember the past