Abstract

This article functions as the introduction to the Themed Issue on Archaeologies of Fashion Film. The text introduces fashion film as a genre and as an historically dynamic form of audiovisual expression that we approach through fashion history, media archaeology and new film history. While introducing key concepts and approaches, the authors propose a form of ‘parallax historiography’, a term emerging from Thomas Elsaesser’s work, that links different time periods from early cinema to recent digital platforms, even ‘post-cinema’. The introduction makes references to the contributions in this issue that address historical conditions of emergence, marginal voices in the historical record and unexcavated archival materials; and the issue shows how they all contain feedback loops or recursive traits that resonate in contemporary practice where infrastructures of platforms and data frame the moving image.

Highlights

  • The articles in this Themed Issue emerge from the Archaeology of Fashion Film (AFF) research project that ran from 2017–2019, and involved a range of academics, curators, archivists and fashion filmmakers

  • The project’s principal aim was to investigate the epistemologies and contexts of contemporary digital fashion film and its precursors. It was the first time they had watched silent fashion film projected onto a large screen, showing early 20th-century fashions that were literally larger than life, hand-coloured and modelled by women who, to the filmmakers’ modern eyes, seemed endearingly unprofessional, even gawky, in their unaccustomed role as fashion models

  • The project explored the under-investigated history of fashion film in the early 20th century, and its legacy for the rapidly changing field of digital fashion communications in the early 21st century

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Summary

Introduction

The articles in this Themed Issue emerge from the Archaeology of Fashion Film (AFF) research project that ran from 2017–2019, and involved a range of academics, curators, archivists and fashion filmmakers.1 The project’s principal aim was to investigate the epistemologies and contexts of contemporary digital fashion film and its precursors.

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