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Epidermal Body

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Costume Art concludes with the body’s most expansive and visually salient organ: the skin. The Enlightenment marked a decisive epistemological shift in the conceptualization of the epidermis, as the emergence of dermatology as a formalized medical discipline transformed the skin from a biological covering into a subject of physiological discourse. Skin came to be understood as a “semiotic surface”—a sensitive membrane capable of expressing internal states.

Skin as both protective barrier and communicative interface resonates with fashion’s mediating capacity. Within this framework, clothing functions as an extension of the epidermis and, by implication, inner character. Several garments presented here articulate this relationship through material strategies that evoke the properties of skin. In some cases, the reference is literal, as in accessories fashioned from animal hide. Elsewhere, designers employ fabrics approximating the tone, texture, and elasticity of flesh, proposing clothing as a responsive second skin engineered to stretch, compress, and adapt to movement.

By incorporating a spectrum of skin tones, the works challenge historical hierarchies that have regulated and aestheticized the body through color. The exhibition thus reaches its conceptual resolution: what began with the cultural framing of the nude body culminates in an affirmation of corporeal plurality, positioning fashion as a critical medium through which the diversity of human embodiment can be recognized and celebrated.

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