Wedding Dresses 1775-2014, V&A - exhibition review

This major exhibition features 80 wedding dresses from 1775 to now, including ravishing gowns by the likes of Vivienne Westwood and Hardy Amies
Philippa Stockley6 February 2015

The shape of marriage has changed this year; but so over the past 250 years have wedding dresses. They have always closely followed contemporary fashion, noticeable in Sixties’ mini-dresses and the puritanically demure-looking lines of the Seventies from designers such as Geoffrey Beene. Yet, though “virginal” white is now historical, the “white wedding” still dominates — as this major exhibition proves, with 80 dresses from 1775 to now, plus some colourful accessories such as sexy 19th-century garters.

But modern weddings inspire invention. Take Gwen Stefani’s 2002 Gaultier for Dior dress spray-painted pink to the knee, as if she had waded up the aisle through beetroot. And burlesque artist Dita Von Teese’s shot-purple taffeta Vivienne Westwood, straight out of Gone With the Wind, is as attention-grabbing as its cinch-waisted wearer (though the smallest waist on show belonged to a Harriet Joyce, who for her 1899 marriage made her own, also purple, outfit).

Until Mar 15 2015 (020 7420 9736, vam.ac.uk)

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