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Geva Newsreel 375, 1966

A Pierre Cardin Fashion Show at the Israel Museum

1 Minute, 1966
Genre:
Moment

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Directed by: Unknown
Subtitles: English, Hebrew
In November of 1966, a Pierre Cardin fashion house delegation, accompanied by an entourage of French male and female models, arrived in Israel ahead of an exclusive fashion show they were to host at the Israel Museum. Six female and four male models (one of whom, Boaz Mazor, was a native Israeli) showcased a range of different sarafans* (*a trapezoidal Russian jumper dress), all of which were part of the designer’s upcoming autumn-winter 1966 collection – complete with giant zippers, polo waistcoats, boots galore, and skin-tight smoking jackets. At the cocktail party hosted in Paris ahead of the event, the designer told daily paper Marriv’s foreign correspondent how the fashion house’s trip to Israel has no business significance, as it is only meant as a celebration of France’s deep affection for Israel. For that reason, he explained that all proceeds from the sold-out fashion show, £9,000 in total by the museum’s estimate, had been donated to the museum, (a ticket for two was priced at £60, with tickets limited to 150. The press described the event as “meant for those of the deep pocket persuasion.”) The production itself did not cost the museum directors a penny, as all travel expenses had been covered well in advance. “What man does not worship at Jerusalem’s altar, and what man is not in awe of the grand creation that is Israel?” Cardin waxed poetic. The collaboration between the Israel Museum and the House of Cardin was the brainchild of David Rothman, an international runway agent. Initially, the museum’s powers-that-be were quite apprehensive, citing a range of puritanical reasons, only to later U-turn on their opposition following pressure from the Israeli embassy in France, the Foreign Office, and the Department of Tourism – coupled with the promise of international-scale PR, which was more than delivered on with extensive coverage in the French press. Members of the audience, meanwhile, were promised that one of the garments featured that evening would be up for grabs in a draw. The runway garments were described as outfits straight from Mars, or genuine “spacewear.” Daily paper Al HaMishmar’s Dalia Shehory described the models as flat-chested, flat-heeled, and stripped of any lip colour. That said, it appeared that equally as the fashion itself or the designer’s futuristic style and aesthetic, the very prospect of models traipsing about the museum caused quite the uproar and dare one say, was even a slap in the face to some. At a Jerusalem press conference when Cardin was asked what fashion could possibly have to do with a museum, he replied “every fashion is destined to become obsolete and eventually, must be consigned to a museum.”

A delegation of the famous French fashion house of Pierre Cardin arrives in Israel, on the occasion of a fashion show which will be held at the Israel Museum. The delegation includes female and male models from France, who are seen in the Billy Rose sculpture garden at the museum during a fashion shoot, dressed in the new collection. Israeli and French journalists photograph the models against the backdrop of the sculptures. The fashion show held at the museum will not have a runway, and the models will walk among the crowd. The exhibition is organized with the assistance of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Tourism, as an opportunity for public relations to the Israel Museum.

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