Visiting The Met? The Temple of Dendur will be closed Sunday, April 27 through Friday, May 9. The Met Fifth Avenue will be closed Monday, May 5.

Learn more

Search / All Results

662 results for 1823 men's waistcoat

Image for Sanford Robinson Gifford (1823–1880)
Essay

Sanford Robinson Gifford (1823–1880)

August 1, 2009

By Kevin J. Avery

The second-generation Hudson River School painter built a reputation as a master of light and atmosphere.
Image for The Decoration of Men's Fashion in Eighteenth-Century France
editorial

The Decoration of Men's Fashion in Eighteenth-Century France

June 3, 2015

By Kirstin Purtich

Former Intern Kirstin Purtich discusses the ways in which menswear became more elaborate and customizable in eighteenth-century Paris.
Image for Two by Two
Publication

Two by Two

Two by Two presents a correlated history of women's and men's apparel from the eighteenth century to the 1970s. We do not seek to prove a direct parallel between the evolution of the two, yet we do observe points of profound similarity. We do not seek to elide clothing's practice of gender differentiation, but we can see some transgender crossings. We do not offer a theory of dress on this Noah's Ark of fashion history, but we note that our assembly of the sexes is vividly more true to life than many of the exhibitions of fashion history that give the lion's share of attention to one gender or the other. Little is intractable about gender and dress. At most times, men and women stand separate in their dressing preferences, yet we recognize a dynamic in fashion that grants the sexes a deliberate accord. In the eighteenth century, men were resplendent in lace trims and accents, floral waistcoats, and rich suits. In the 1830s, it might have seemed as if the shapes, textures, and choices in men's and women's apparel were coming closer and closer together. In the Victorian era, women accommodated their dress to the industrial black and heavy textiles that men in dark frock coats with bowlers and top hats had evolved by the mid-nineteenth century. By the 1860s, the man's three-piece suit was starting to emerge. At the beginning of the twentieth century, sportswear and separates were transforming the wardrobes of women and men and making them more alike. The Gibson Girl and her beau were both wearing starched shirts, wool blazers, and straw bowlers. In the 1940s, both men and women affected a slim-hipped, broad-shouldered swagger. By the late 1960s, the word unisex had entered the popular vocabulary in order to describe the wide-ranging instances of dress interchangeable as to gender. Yet we acknowledge the truism that in contemporary formal wear, the male defers to the grander display of the female. We do not propose a specific system to govern the dress of men and women together. History affords no consistent pattern of gender match or appropriation, though men's clothing more often lends its specific types to women's than the other way around. As clothing is a constituent of social authority, we can rightly assert that a particular society attaches greater value to men's apparel. Even in contemporary dress, while womenswear borrows men's tailoring, the buttoning is still reversed. Surely, God's instruction to Noah was meant to benefit propagation. However, no other animal on the ark benefits from the propensity to variety and expression that humans achieve through clothing.
Press Release

American Landscapes

Image for Historical Photographs: Windows into the Past
editorial

Historical Photographs: Windows into the Past

April 11, 2013

By Genevieve

Teen Advisory Group Member Genevieve considers the role the photographs play in history and discusses Timothy H. O'Sullivan's photograph A Harvest for Death, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, currently on view in the exhibition Photography and the American Civil War.
Image for How Did He Paint That?
editorial

How Did He Paint That?

December 31, 2013

By Lawrence

Former High School Intern Lawrence describes two paintings at the Met that caused him to wonder, "How did he paint that?"
Image for A Royal Undertaking: Preparing the Costumes for *Visitors to Versailles*
editorial

A Royal Undertaking: Preparing the Costumes for Visitors to Versailles

July 23, 2018

By Sarah Scaturro and Cassandra Gero

Hear from two Costume Institute conservators about what it takes to restore eighteen-century dress to a state of splendor fit for the Bourbon Court.
Image for Licked: The Academic Ideal
editorial

Licked: The Academic Ideal

June 3, 2013

By Kristen

Teen Advisory Group Member Kristen imagines a conversation between the French academic painters and the Impressionists at the Paris Salon of 1863.
Image for Skill versus Judgment
editorial

Skill versus Judgment

May 29, 2013

By Maleficent Twemlow

Image for Waistcoat

Date: third quarter 18th century
Accession Number: 2009.300.1090a, b

Image for Waistcoat

Date: 1750–70
Accession Number: 2009.300.2839

Image for Waistcoat

Date: 1780–1800
Accession Number: 2009.300.2886

Image for Waistcoat

Date: 18th century
Accession Number: 43.127.1

Image for Waistcoat

Date: late 18th century
Accession Number: C.I.46.59.14

Image for Waistcoat

Date: early 19th century
Accession Number: C.I.41.124.73

Image for Waistcoat

Date: early 18th century
Accession Number: 40.134.12

Image for Waistcoat

Date: 1725–50
Accession Number: 23.170.4

Image for Waistcoat

Date: 1760–70
Accession Number: 2009.300.2855

Image for Waistcoat

Date: early 18th century
Accession Number: 45.49