July 3, 2024

The Art of Influence at Lyndhurst

A new exhibition at a National Trust Historic Site features the fashion of Irene Castle, Edna St. Vincent Millay, and Coco Chanel.

We live in a world filled with influencers. Fashionable individuals plastered all over the web and social media channels sharing their recommendations for style, food, travel in the hopes that you will elevate their message and brands.

However there have always been individuals living as arbiters of taste, in the summer of 2024, Lyndhurst Mansion in Tarrytown, New York is hosting Influencers; 1920s Fashion and the New Woman an exhibition that examines 1920s fashion—and the shifts in society that allowed women more freedom and control—through the lens of three distinct “influencers” of the era: Irene Castle, Edna St. Vincent Millay, and Coco Chanel.

Images of 1920s women's fashion from an exhibition on Coco Chanel, Irene Castle, and Edna St. Vincent Millay at Lyndhurst.

photo by: Lyndhurst

Founder of the College of Human Ecology at Cornell, Martha Van Rensselaer’s dress that she wore when she was presented to the Queen of Belgium in 1923. Flora Rose found the accompanying shoes in a last-minute search. Courtesy of the Cornell College of Human Ecology, Fashion + Textile Collection.

Images of 1920s women's fashion from an exhibition on Coco Chanel, Irene Castle, and Edna St. Vincent Millay at Lyndhurst.

photo by: Lyndhurst

A collection of undergarments from the Victorian, Edwardian, and 1920s eras, courtesy of the Cornell College of Human Ecology, Fashion + Textile Collection.

Most of the garments in this exhibition come from Cornell University’s College of Human Ecology, Fashion + Textile Collection, a program that pioneered women’s improvement and education, and set up Fashion Design as a viable career choice.

Explore the legacy of Castle, Millay, and Chanel on the way women lived, dressed and presented themselves through what they wore.

Irene Castle

Images of 1920s women's fashion from an exhibition on Coco Chanel, Irene Castle, and Edna St. Vincent Millay at Lyndhurst.

photo by: Lyndhurst

A collection of dresses representative of Irene Castle. Courtesy of the Cornell College of Human Ecology, Fashion + Textile Collection.

Initially famous for her dancing career with his husband, Vernon in the 19-teens, Castle re-invented her career, away from dancing, following her husband’s death during World War I. Castle’s style was apparent in the short silent films that she starred in, and she was hailed as “The best-known and best-dressed woman in America”. Using the Castle name, she created a ready to wear fashion line inspired by her own style. This was the first “celebrity fashion line” in the United States, which set up the ability for others to follow in her dancing footsteps.

In the photo, you can see a collection of dresses representative of Irene Castle influence, from her dramatic silver headdress and dance outfit, to the ready to wear clothing for the everyday woman. A clip of one of her silent featuring her and her husband plays in the background. In the 1920s, a woman could see her, and be her through clothes.

Edna St. Vincent Millay

Images of 1920s women's fashion from an exhibition on Coco Chanel, Irene Castle, and Edna St. Vincent Millay at Lyndhurst.

photo by: Lyndhurst

An array of clothing belonging to and representing Millay's style. Courtesy of The Edna St. Vincent Millay Society at Steepletop.

“Poet Edna St. Vincent Millay was the symbol of the free-spirited modern woman in the first decades of the 20th century.” A prolific writer and the first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize in 1923, Millay lived a bohemian lifestyle and was the ‘It’ girl of Greenwich Village, where she wore clothing that went against gender norms, embraced foreign cultures, and reflected her intellectualism.

This collection of clothing represents the bohemian and ethnic styles that she favored, and others began to copy. From menswear-inspired outfits to Chinoiserie and eastern-inspired tie dyes; Millay influenced many “new” women in the 1920s. Millay’s clothing for the exhibition is on loan from her home ‘Steepletop’, which is now a historic house museum dedicated to her literary legacy.

Coco Chanel

Images of 1920s women's fashion from an exhibition on Coco Chanel, Irene Castle, and Edna St. Vincent Millay at Lyndhurst.

photo by: Lyndhurst

View of the dresses representing Coco Chanel's style. College of Human Ecology, Fashion + Textile Collection.

The 1920s is synonymous with the Flapper Style and French fashion designer and lifestyle influencer, Coco Chanel “championed simple elegance that appealed to the more active woman of the 1920s”. The invention of Chanel No. 5 perfume was integral to the flapper culture as it could cover up the smell of sweat from dancing and partying all night long.

This grouping of beaded dresses, including Anna Gould’s pink Agnes dress (far left) and Chanel’s ‘Little Black Dress’ in the glass case are a special representation of a type of garment that is hard to find in such good condition today, as the dancing, sweating, and other chemicals of the time have contributed to the disintegration and destruction of the fabrics on many couture fashion flapper style gowns.

Text uses excepts and quotes from the “Influencers” Exhibition Catalogue, written by Lyndhurst Executive Director, Howard Zar and Denise Nicole Green, PhD. From The College of Human Ecology at Cornell University, with an introduction by National Trust for Historic Preservation President and CEO Carol Quillen.

This exhibition is made possible in part by Montefiore Einstein, The Coby Foundation, and Cornell’s College of Human Ecology, Fashion + Textile Collection.

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Emma Gencarelli is the film, photography, & collections coordinator at Lyndhurst.

Every place has a woman's story to tell. Through Where Women Made History, we are identifying, honoring, and elevating places across the country where women have changed their communities and the world.

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