Carton d'invitation à l'exposition des tuniques par Raymond Duncan
Théâtre Raymond Duncan|Paris s. d. [1922]|12.50 x 12.50 cm|une feuille
€150
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⬨ 66032
Rare invitation card to attend the exhibition of tunics created by Raymond Duncan, in the theater-gallery he founded at 34, rue du Colisée, from April 25 to June 1, 1922. Beautiful and rare copy. Raymond Duncan was fascinated by ancient Greece since his childhood: the aesthetics and fashion of The life he promoted at the Akademia was marked by this influence. The press of the time glossed over the clothes worn by Raymond Duncan and his disciples: "Greek-style" tunics that he / she was making himself. Behind the supposed ridicule of this accoutrement, these unisex tunics was a way of abolishing the differences in gender and class. Raymond Duncan would have adopted this dress after his coachman was denied access to a beach because of his livery that betrayed his social status. The life of the Akademia was organized around many activities: dance, music, weaving, gymnastics, crafts, spinning, Orphic singing, language and Greek philosophy. These courses included students from outside - who paid according to their possibilities - and members of the living community between its walls for a few days, a few months or a few years. Housed and fed - according to the vegetarian diet promoted by Duncan - these last, in return, participated in the community's economy making sandals, spinning wool, weaving tunics on primitive crafts. These artifacts were then sold - at high prices - in the Akademia shop located rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré.