Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy


Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy was an art exhibition held 7 May - 1 September 2008 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art featuring clothing inspired by superhero costuming, along with actual costumes from superhero films. The exhibit was curated by Andrew Bolton of the Costume Center, and author Michael Chabon wrote material for the exhibition catalog. Backdrops for the exhibition were derived from Alex Ross's Justice, Jamie Rama, Nathan Crowley, Dermot Power, Gary Frank, and photographs of Thomas Jane as The Punisher, Nicolas Cage as Ghost Rider, and Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman.

Contents

The exhibition included many notable comicbook issues, mostly on loan from Michael E. Uslan and Metropolis Collectibles, including some of the most iconic costume imagery, such as Action Comics #1, Amazing Fantasy #15, and The Amazing Spider-Man #252, The Incredible Hulk #1, Tales of Suspense #39, The X-Men #1, Sensation Comics #1, Captain America Comics #1, Batman #42, Detective Comics #33, Flash Comics #1, Marvel Spotlight #5, and The Fantastic Four #51.
The actual movie costumes featured were that worn by Christopher Reeve as the title role in Superman designed by Yvonne Blake, Rebecca Romijn as Mystique in designed by Gordon J. Smith, Tobey Maguire as the title role in Spider-Man 3 designed by James Acheson, Lynda Carter as the television Wonder Woman designed by Donfeld, Christian Bale as the Batman in The Dark Knight designed by Lindy Hemming, Robert Downey, Jr. as Iron Man in Iron Man designed by Adi Granov and Phil Saunders.
The main focus of the exhibit is how fashion designers have taken inspiration from superhero artwork. The designers comprise Bernard Willhelm, House of Moschino, Spyder Active Sports, Jean-Paul Gaultier, Thierry Mugler, Julien Macdonald, Giorgio Armani, John Galliano, House of Dior, Rick Owens, Pierre Cardin, House of Balenciaga and Nicolas Ghesquière, Gareth Pugh, Alexander McQueen, As Four, Walter Van Beirendock, Dolce & Gabbana, Descente Ltd., SPEEDO, Hussain Chalayan, Atair Aerospace, and Dava J. Newman.

Reception

in The New York Times's dismissed the exhibition as "camp" as well as criticizing the paucity of examples from the 1960s and 1970s and the inclusion of only two American designers, but she compares it to the negative reception Thierry Mugler received for his metal and plastic armor that exposed women's most vulnerable body parts. Layla Halabian in The Fader called it "a weird high school prom." Popsugar called it "incredibly creative."