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HISTORY
OF THE FLAMENCO DRESS
By:
Dory Shakiba
Flamenco is the traditional song and
dance of the Gypsies (flamencos) of Andalusia in southern Spain.
Its history can be traced over several centuries from Gypsy, Moorish,
Andalusian, and other roots, flamenco music and dance entered polite
society in the early 19th century as café entertainment.
In the same century, guitar accompaniment became common for many
genres, and guitar solos also developed. In the 20th century, commercial
pressure distorted much traditional flamenco dance. Its evolution
is a source of great debate with no accepted explanation of how
flamenco resulted from the cultural influences of such diverse regions
as North Africa, Southern Europe and the Near and Far East. Flamenco
has never been more popular in Spain and abroad than it is today
with a new generation of new flamenco performers in the post-Franco
era who have broadened flamenco's appeal to an international audience.
The origins of the flamenco dress lie in the work dresses worn by
nineteenth century Andalusian women, the dresses worn by the those
who accompanied the livestock traders who gathered at the Prado
de San Sebastián for Seville's Feria de Abril from 1847 onwards.
As business gave way to pleasure the fair changed from a Feria de
Ganado - a livestock fair - to simply become a Feria that was a
celebration of those original outfits, obtaining the blessing of
even the most distinguished ladies at the 1929 Ibero-American Exhibition.
Around the same time, the increasing acceptance of flamenco as a
professional art form acted as a parallel force in consecrating
the traditional Andalusian dress as de rigueur on stage. The material
used became richer, as did adornments and complements: lacing, embroidered
ribbons, flowers, costume jewellery, Manila silk shawls, and ladies'
fans... A newfound creative freedom, which accentuated natural feminine
beauty, and spurred on the evolution of a dress, which even, transformed
itself into a miniskirt in the sixties.
In the first years of the April Fair in Seville, the spouses of
the cattle traders used to go with their husbands, usually Gypsies,
or simple peasants, dressed in their humble calico robes, work dresses
with two or three frills. They were nice-looking dresses with sparkling
colors that enhanced the women's bodies. The 1929 Iberoamerican
Exposition was the christening and definitive acceptance of the
Flamenco dress by the upper classes as a necessary article for attending
the April Fair.
The original shape of the dress, the "guitar body", enhanced
the woman's qualities and masked its defects: A low neck area round
or square, according to the fashion, hair pulled back in a bun to
make the neck appear thinner, the dress tightened around the waist
and widening at the hips and the frills are placed to have the woman
walk in a more boasting fashion. The dress has been earning a reputation
as very easy-to-wear and flirty with the years thanks to the different
accessories: Manila scarves, flowers placed in the hair, etc.
The Flamenco dress has varied according to fashion and the economic
situation but without losing its uniqueness. In the forties with
the passing of the Civil War it reached its zenith. The women stood
out at the Fair with their frilled dresses and were just as long
as they are now, straight and spotted, with austere fabrics, complemented
with flowers, fine combs, bracelets and hidden money-pockets that
have always generally been a custom according to style.
In the fifties calico continued to be the main cloth, but the dress
was enriched with stitched lace or belts for comfort. The dress
was shortened and the footwear was visible.
The economic boom of the sixties and
seventies had repercussions for the flamenco dress; it was shortened
to the knee or halfway up the calf. The frills were cloaked and
they began to use the "tergal", a base of cotton and an
embroidered cloth as the main decorative feature. The sleeves reached
the elbows or the wrist and were stitched with little frills. In
the seventies they were lengthened to the ankles and were fashioned
with bright colors.
In the eighties they were more emphasized
and the fashion was to have printed tapestries. In the nineties
the dress lost its volume, it purified its outline and looked more
for comfort but without losing its sensuality and essence. The waist
has been dropped, the silhouette has been marked and the spotted
and straight style is back. Simpleness has returned to the flamenco
dress and continues going back to its origins.
The flamenco dress brings together
tradition and innovation. While it does conserve a basic structure
of a figure-hugging body and a skirt layered with flounces, creativity
flows within this framework. In the eighties the flamenco dress
lived a baroque decade of lacing and satin ribbons. In the nineties,
in a show of simplicity, it shed its embellishments, its starched
rigidity and concealed hips, and underwent a metamorphosis to become
light, airy and sensual. Now women were beginning to wrap themselves
in silky smooth material, plain colors and those ubiquitous spots.
The dress showed off women's contours, drawing in the waist and
flounces, regardless of whether the arms were stripped bare or covered
in modesty. As we move into the 3rd Millennium, the style draws
inspiration from the past, poplin is brought back (though the close
fit is maintained), the dress is divided into a two-piece outfit,
the spots start to grow... A continuous state of flux and invention,
which is mirrored in all types of complements or avíos. If
this year a large flower is the thing to have in your hair, worn
low next to the bun, then the next it'll be a small flower placed
up high. If this year the earrings to have are ringlets, the next
they'll be pendant earrings. If your shawl this year is decorated
with painted flowers, the next it'll be made out of patterned cloth…
And this incessant reinvention keeps
everybody's vision focused, looking for the next direction. And
the next direction might be born at the sewing machine in the workshop
of a flamenco seamstress, or more likely in the chains of better-known
firms dedicated to tailoring this unique attire. In fact, the annual
turnover in the sector is already more than 120 million euros according
to the Asociación de Empresarios de la Moda Flamenca, a body
that oversees the flamenco fashion industry. This figure is shared
among thirty or so clothing manufacturers concentrated largely around
the province of Seville. A clear sign of the sector's strength can
be found at the Salón Internacional de Moda Flamenca (Simof),
an international flamenco fashion event organized by the Doble Erre
fashion house and Hotel Alcora. The eighth edition of the event,
held in February 2002, brought together more than twenty designers,
putting their creations on show on eighteen catwalks for ten thousand
visitors.
And the flamenco dress has even found
a place in the world of haute couture, inspiring designers like
Yves Saint Laurent, or Vittorio & Lucchino from Seville, who
have created an exclusive line of flamenco dresses. And these dazzling
designs have moved onto the stage too - Francis Montesinos designs
Eva Yerbabuena's wardrobe, while Joaquín Cortés is
dressed by Armani. But the entente isn't by any means universally
accepted, especially not by female artists. The stiff traditional
bata de cola dress worn by Matilde Coral has nothing to do with
the light, fluttering dresses worn by Sara Baras. Purity against
renovation. The same old debate comes up everywhere evolution creeps
in.
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