Silk for an Industrial Age

Exhibition Website

Feb 15 2017 - May 21 2017

This exhibition showcases printed silk fabrics that celebrate the modern lifestyle made possible by science and industry. During the 1920s, Americans marveled at technologies like electricity, cars, and radios that transformed daily life. This enthusiasm continued in the 1930s but was colored by the Depression—many hoped that science and industry could solve problems like poverty and unemployment.

On display are a sampling of the wide variety of designs made by American silk manufacturers at this time. The Museum holds one of the largest collections of these silks in the United States, with prints that range from sports and movies to food and hats. The most creative silk companies commissioned their designs from artists, illustrators, and industrial designers. Women would then buy the silks by the yard at department stores in order to make their own clothes or have them made by a dressmaker. Thanks to the inventive silks featured in this exhibition, women of the Twenties and Thirties could show off their era’s machine-driven modernity via their fashion.

Credit: Exhibition overview from museum website.

  • Fiber Arts
  • American
  • 20th Century
  • Design

Exhibition Venues & Dates