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Classical Body

Mô tả

The aesthetic paradigms of the classical body derive from Greek and Roman principles of balance, harmony, symmetry, and proportion. These ideals have exerted a profound and enduring influence across the history of Western art and fashion, particularly during the Renaissance, Neoclassical, and modern periods. In his influential treatise Canon, the fifth-century BCE sculptor Polykleitos articulated a rigorous system of mathematical ratios governing the perfect human form, emphasizing “symmetria” (the commensurability of constituent parts). Central to this concept is dynamic equilibrium, most clearly expressed through the contrapposto pose.

A century later, the sculptor Praxiteles advanced a strikingly different mode of classical naturalism, introducing a heightened sensuality by exaggerating the contrapposto stance with a sense of sinuous grace. Subsequent admiration for these two models of classical embodiment is evident in the fashions presented here. Designers variously engage these standards through trompe l’oeil depictions of sculpted bodies, garments that evoke the elegance of “wet drapery,” and molded components that impose, rather than merely suggest, musculature. Together, these works invoke a supposedly timeless classical ideal—one whose assumptions about corporeal perfection are questioned, complicated, and ultimately dismantled by the thematic groupings that follow.

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