Interactive visit: Fashion & Interiors. A Gendered Affair.
A creative tour with workshop for primary education in the temporary exhitibion.
Visitor information
Tickets
When
From 8 April to 3 August 2025Duration
1,5 hoursLanguages
DutchFor whom
Primary educationPractical information
- Monday to Sunday between 10 AM - 6 PM (closed on Wednesday)
- Maximum 15 students per guide
- €105 per guide (including €5 administration costs)
Discover Fashion & Interiors. A Gendered Affair. together with a MoMu guide. Enjoy creative assignments along the way, with an inspired workshop in the MoMu Studio as a highlight!
The emphasis of an 'Interactive Visit' is not so much on the content of the story, but more on the experience: learning how to translate what you see into words, paying attention to materials and colours, …
Through various themes, the exhibition explores the relationship between fashion and interiors from a gender perspective.
In the second half of the nineteenth century, women played an important role as ‘beautifiers’ of themselves and their homes. With an eye on comfort, they decorated the interior with soft cushions and textures, drapes, handiwork and all manner of knickknacks. Her body, too, was weighed down with multiple layers of fabric and passementerie with the result that she merged with her interior, even almost to the point of disappearing altogether.
This visual mergence was given substance by a number of discerning male creatives, including Henry van de Velde, who started designing women’s clothes. In their pursuit of harmony, they unified architecture, furniture, decor, clothing and accessories to create a total work of art.
Modernist (interior)architects like Adolf Loos, Lilly Reich and Le Corbusier also had their opinions about fashion, which were consistent with their vision of design. They strove for functionality and were opposed to the frivolity of fashion.
Contemporary creations by (among others) Maison Martin Margiela, Ann Demeulemeester, Raf Simons and Hussein Chalayan on display in the exhibition, serve as a cue to reflect on the historical correlation between interior and fashion.