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Fashion drawing of ink on paper by Ray Eames of a sleeveless gown with a colorful geometric shaped pattern.

Fashion Drawing: Party Dress

At twenty, Ray wrote to her mother declaring that she wanted to earn a living in “commercial art, either advertising or costume design.” Six years later, she wrote again saying that her friend Eleanor McClatchy “told me that ‘Fran’ (Francis Hayes) was to give a concert in February and wanted a costume, so I drew up several designs and sent them to Eleanor⁠—who seemed to like them very much.”

The drawing is signed “Ray Kaiser” in lower right corner.

Artifact
A.2019.2.010
Material
Ink and graphite on paper
Artist / Designer
Ray Kaiser
Dimensions
17 ¹⁵⁄₁₆ × 11 ⅞ in / 45.56 × 30.16 cm
Date
c. 1930

This floor-length, bias-cut evening dress would have been the height of fashion in the late 1920s and early 1930s when Ray was a high school student and a member of the Art Club. It is likely that this illustration was created during a session of the club. It is one of a small number of Ray’s drawings that survive from this period.

The strikingly geometric fabric design of pink, white and black overlapping circles and a large green leaf is repeated and magnified behind the model’s head. As a member of the Art Club Ray would have been exposed to Art Deco, a visual arts style influenced by the geometric forms of Cubism (an art style that flourished in the 1920s and 1930s). The soft, clinging fabric is probably intended to represent a silk faille or crepe⁠—both popular textiles in the 1930s that draped beautifully.

Dale Carolyn Gluckman

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