Press RoomPhoenix Art Museum, Arizona Costume Institute to unveil Geoffrey Beene Archive during live virtual event

Phoenix Art Museum, Arizona Costume Institute to unveil Geoffrey Beene Archive during live virtual event

Phoenix Art Museum, Arizona Costume Institute to unveil Geoffrey Beene Archive during live virtual event
Nov, 12, 2020

Special Events and ProgramsCollectionsFashion Design

Phoenix Art Museum, Arizona Costume Institute to unveil Geoffrey Beene Archive during live virtual event

On February 11, 2021, a virtual event will raise funds in support of Museum’s fashion design program and provide insider access to Museum’s new archive of more than 400 Geoffrey Beene garments

PHOENIX (November 12, 2020) – Phoenix Art Museum and Arizona Costume Institute (ACI), a Museum affiliate group that supports the institution’s fashion design department, will present a virtual unveiling of the new Geoffrey Beene Archive at Phoenix Art Museum on February 11, 2021 at 6 pm. The virtual fundraiser, entitledGeoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement, celebrates a recent gift of more than 350 Beene garments to Phoenix Art Museum from Patsy Tarr, longtime Beene patron, president of the 2wice Arts Foundation, and founder and publisher of 2wice magazines and books, which sets the stage for a future exhibition of Beene’s work at the Museum during the 2022-2023 exhibition season. Among the evening’s highlights, the event will feature the premiere of an original short film that provides an in-depth look at 25 garments by the designer, renowned for his whimsical, comfortable, and exacting designs; a dance performance by Deanna McBrearty, former dancer in the New York City Ballet and Beene model; stories by founding archive contributor Tarr; and comments by Tim Rodgers, PhD, the Museum’s Sybil Harrington Director and CEO; Helen Jean, the Museum’s Jacquie Dorrance Curator of Fashion Design; and Kathie May, president of Arizona Costume Institute. Geoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement will be streamed live and is open free to the public, with suggested donations of $250 or greater in support of the fashion design program and collection at Phoenix Art Museum. Additional sponsorship and underwriting opportunities are also available to support the event, the preservation of the archive, and educational programming. The February event replaces the annual ACI Holiday Luncheon, which was postponed to December 6, 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and raises vital funds each year in support of the Museum’s fashion design program.

“We are incredibly excited to present this event at a time when our community’s ability to gather together is limited by the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Tim Rodgers, PhD, the Museum’s Sybil Harrington Director and CEO. “Geoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement celebrates the generosity of donors like Patsy Tarr, who give so generously in support of Phoenix Art Museum; the artistry of Geoffrey Beene; and the support of Arizona Costume Institute. Although we are sad not to celebrate the Holiday Luncheon together in 2020, I am grateful to our ACI volunteers, led by ACI president Kathie May and event chairs Ruby Farias, Kelley Sucher, Perrine Adams, and Laura Madden, for creating something exceptional and engaging that increases access to our fashion design collection during these challenging times.”

Image credit: Behind the scenes of "Geoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement." Manley Films production and photograph. Courtesy of Phoenix Art Museum.
Image credit: Behind the scenes of “Geoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement.” Manley Films production and photograph. Courtesy of Phoenix Art Museum.

In addition to celebrating the unveiling of the new Geoffrey Beene Archive at Phoenix Art Museum, Geoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement marks an important milestone, asACI has pledged $67,500 over five years to support the acquisition of additional work by the late designer to further grow the breadth and depth of the Beene Archive. Considered one of the most whimsical designers in American history and renowned for his superb technical skills, Geoffrey Beene (1927–2004) created forward-thinking, practical, and comfortable women’s fashions that showcased contrasting details and clean, geometric designs, while also highlighting his distinct humor, wit, and artistic vision. Throughout his career, Beene created versatile jumpsuits, intricately detailed boleros, elegant evening gowns, and more, earning wide acclaim for his designs that centered comfort and movement, both in how the wearer experienced his garments and how the onlooker viewed his technically precise patterns and forms that often created the illusion of motion. Also considered the father of American sportswear, Beene famously used challenging fabrics with significant pliability such as double-knit jersey, primarily used in t-shirts, to construct stylized designs that ensured maximum comfort, a feat that could be achieved only by someone with his mastery of tailoring. Beene was additionally known for regularly incorporating elements of menswear, including ties and starched-style collars, into his womenswear, evidence of his tailoring background. Throughout his career, he received various awards and accolades, including induction into the Fashion Hall of Fame, eight Coty Fashion Critics Awards, and a lifetime achievement award in 1998 from the Council of Fashion Designers of America. He also created the wedding dress for Lynda Bird Johnson Robb, daughter of former U.S. President Lyndon Baines Johnson and First Lady Claudia “Lady Bird” Johnson. Beene’s work can be found in the collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, de Young Museum, Fashion Institute of Technology, and Victoria and Albert Museum, among many other internationally renowned fashion collections.

“Geoffrey Beene prioritized movement in every single design, and the virtual event Geoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement explores and celebrates this boundless mobility inherent in his masterfully crafted work,” said Helen Jean, the Museum’s Jacquie Dorrance Curator of Fashion Design. “Through a video produced by Phoenix-based Manley Films and messages from Patsy Tarr, Beene Archive donor, and former ballerina and longtime Beene model Deanna McBrearty, event attendees will enjoy the unprecedented opportunity to closely examine his impeccable garments, now part of the Museum’s new Geoffrey Beene Archive, through the lenses of physical, aesthetic, and social movement to learn how he constructed comfortable yet stunning ensembles that ensured maximum mobility and gave the illusion of movement through various patterns and forms.”

Members of the public who attend the virtual event on February 11 will discover the sense of movement and artistry in Beene’s designs through the world premiere of a film created by the Museum in collaboration with Phoenix-based Manley Films. Featuring more than 25 ensembles from the collection, the video is narrated by Tarr and McBrearty, who will also share their experiences working with the designer. The evening will additionally feature a pre-recorded dance homage by McBrearty, who performs original choreography in a jumpsuit created by the late designer to demonstrate the range of mobility his garments allow, in addition to comments that celebrate Beene’s high-performance couture by Rodgers, Jean, and May.

“Arizona Costume Institute is honored to play a pivotal role in the success of the fashion design department at Phoenix Art Museum and present this once-in-a-lifetime experience that celebrates and shares these new works by Geoffrey Beene with our members and the Museum’s diverse audiences,” said Kathie May, who has served as ACI president since 2019. “We hope that by making this event accessible to all in our community, more people will have the opportunity to learn about the Museum’s exciting collection and find ways to get involved in support of our Phoenix Art Museum.”

Geoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement will be presented free to the public on February 11, 2021 at 6 pm. To make this increased access to the Museum’s fashion design collection possible for the community, Arizona Costume Institute and Phoenix Art Museum encourage all attendees who are able to do so to make a donation in support of the fashion design program at Phoenix Art Museum. Individuals who support the event through gifts of $250 or greater will receive a complimentary gift bag. Those who donate $1,000 or greater before December 31, 2020 will additionally enjoy exclusive, virtual, pre-event access to view and learn more about key garments from the new Geoffrey Beene Archive with Helen Jean, the Museum’s Jacquie Dorrance Curator of Fashion Design.

To RSVP to Geoffrey Beene: A Duet of Fashion and Movement or provide a donation, click here.

For more information about the event, visit arizonacostumeinstitute.org/geoffrey-beene-virtual-unveiling-fundraiser or contact the Communications Office of Phoenix Art Museum at 602.307.2003 or samantha.andreacchi@phxart.org.

For information on Arizona Costume Institute or to become an ACI member, visit arizonacostumeinstitute.org/.

About Phoenix Art Museum

Since 1959, Phoenix Art Museum has provided millions of guests with access to world-class art and experiences in an effort to ignite imaginations, create meaningful connections, and serve as a brave space for all people who wish to experience the transformative power of art. Located in Phoenix’s Central Corridor, the Museum is a vibrant destination for the visual arts and the largest art museum in the southwestern United States. Each year, more than 300,000 guests engage with critically acclaimed national and international exhibitions and the Museum’s collection of more than 20,000 works of American and Western American, Asian, European, Latin American, modern and contemporary art, and fashion design. The Museum also presents a comprehensive film program, live performances, and educational programs designed for visitors of all ages, along with vibrant photography exhibitions made possible through the Museum’s landmark partnership with the Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona. To learn more about Phoenix Art Museum, visit phxart.org, or call 602.257.1880.

About the Fashion Design Collection at Phoenix Art Museum

Founded in 1966, the fashion design collection of Phoenix Art Museum features more than 8,000 objects, including American and European men’s, women’s, and children’s dress and accessories dating from the late 17th century to the present. The Museum organizes two fashion exhibitions annually that draw from the renowned collection and are presented in the Kelly Ellman Fashion Design Gallery. Phoenix Art Museum is one of only seven art museums in the country with a long and continuously active fashion program.

About the Geoffrey Beene Archive at Phoenix Art Museum

The Geoffrey Beene Archive at Phoenix Art Museum features more than 400 garments by the late designer, more than 350 of which were donated in 2019 to the Museum by Patsy Tarr, president of the 2wice Arts Foundation and founder and publisher of 2wice magazines and books. Spanning the 1980s through the 1990s, Tarr’s gift of custom-made ensembles and accessories, including jumpsuits, trousers, vests, boleros, gowns, collars, and more, established the Museum as one of the nation’s leading institutions with holdings of Beene’s designs. The Geoffrey Beene Archive at Phoenix Art Museum is now the third archive in the Museum’s renowned fashion design collection of more than 8,000 objects. The Museum’s Ann Bonfoey Taylor Archive, featuring the extraordinary custom-couture wardrobe of American-socialite and tastemaker Ann Bonfoey Taylor, was established in 2008 through a gift from Vernon Taylor, Jr. and his family, while its Emphatics Archive, featuring rare, avant-garde fashions and accessories by renowned designers such as Alexander McQueen, Issey Miyake, Thierry Mugler, John Galliano, and Jean Paul Gaultier, was created in 2015 through a gift from James and Karin Legato, who owned and operated Emphatics, an exclusive boutique in Pittsburgh.

About Arizona Costume Institute

Arizona Costume Institute (ACI) was founded in 1966 to support the fashion design department of Phoenix Art Museum. ACI promotes the appreciation and understanding of fashion design through education programs and fundraising efforts that benefit the Museum’s fashion exhibitions and support the preservation and acquisition of historically and aesthetically significant works. Through the enthusiasm of dedicated volunteers, ACI helps maintain and expand the Museum’s fashion collection. To learn more about Arizona Costume Institute, visit arizonacostumeinstitute.org.

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