The Center for the Study of Regional Dress—an endowed research facility composed of offices and a laboratory located within the Fowler Museum—opened on June 6, 1993.
The aim of the Center's program is to advance the study of cloth and clothing traditions, past and present, through teaching and research. Students, working with the Fowler Museum's outstanding textile collections, investigate all facets of worldwide indigenous dress: the varying aesthetics of regional clothing, the range of technological solutions to cloth production and decoration, and the role of dress in defining social, religious and political identities.
The Center's ongoing activities include:
Teaching:
In the Center's "Textiles of the World" undergraduate course (WAC 133), many of the world's great textile-producing cultures are investigated in quarterly rotation: Amazonia, The Americas, Central Europe, Indonesia, Japan, The Near East and West Africa. These are hands-on classes where students not only have an opportunity to learn the rudiments of weaving but are able to work with examples from the Fowler's outstanding collection of more than 15,000 ethnographic textiles.
Research:
Dr. Patricia Rieff Anawalt, founding director of the Center, is an authority on Middle American clothing as well as worldwide regional dress. She is the author of The Worldwide History of Dress, available in English, German, French, Italian, Spanish and Korean. A Japanese edition will be available in 2011.
Contact:
Founding Director, Dr. Patricia Rieff Anawalt
panawalt@arts.ucla.edu
Associate Director, Barbara Belle Sloan
bsloan@arts.ucla.edu
Center for the Study of Regional Dress
Fowler Museum at UCLA
Box 951549
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1549
310/206-7005
310/206-7007 (FAX)