Folk art on the flights of Ma­lév

Képes Újság (Newspaper with Visuals) reported in 1974: "Soon, the stewardesses of Malév will be wearing Kalocsa aprons. The Kalocsa Folk Art and Home Industry Cooperative have already created the first piece. Its base material is white, and its edge is lined with a 30-centimetre embroidery. The lace-like apron decoration will be a worthy representation of Hungarian folk art.”

Mo­dern Et­ni­ka

The Modern Etnika Creative Group was founded in 1991 by fashion designer Éva Mészaros. The group transferred the traditions of the folk art of the Carpathian Basin to the designer fashion of the 1990s with high quality, both in terms of fabric selection, tailoring patterns and decoration. It was proven at Hungarian and international exhibitions for years that traditions had created a new aesthetic quality in clothing, thanks to the inventive creators of a certain taste.

The 'Rethink/re-button! Magyar is the Mode'

Csár­dás and beach shawls

Lea Gottlieb (1918, Sajószentpéter, 1918 – 2012, Tel Aviv, 2012) was born as Lea Lenke Róth. She wanted to study chemistry, but because of the laws applying to Jews, she wasn’t allowed to. She met her husband, Ármin Gottlieb, shortly before World War II, when she worked as an accountant in the Gottlieb family's raincoat factory. After Germany occupied Hungary, her husband was deported to a forced labour camp, and she and her daughters were first hiding from the Nazis in Sajószentpéter, then in Budapest.

Jac­qu­e­line Al­másy, the "lead­ing la­dy" (1895-1952) and her fri­end El­sa Schia­par­el­li1890–1973)

Jaqueline Erzsébet Mária, Countess Almásy de Zsadány et Törökszentmiklós, attracted the attention of the higher circles not only with her beauty and love for fashion but also with her second wedding that took place in Budapest 10 January: her husband was none other than Louis J. Cartier, the famous French jeweller and watchmaker. Jacqueline Almásy was considered a beauty both in Budapest and Paris, so one of the most outstanding fashion photographers of the 20th century, George Hoyningen-Huene, also photographed her for the French Vogue.  

Folk fashi­on - Int­ro­duc­ti­on

The dialogue between folk attires, bourgeois fashion, and high-quality dressmaking is rarely discussed, as they seem to be contradictory phenomena. Traditional folk costumes come about as the product of a community or the individual influence of unknown creators. They are tied to a single region and symbolise permanence.

The pat­terns of the shep­herd's clo­ak de­sign­ed by Ma­ris­ka Ká­rász

Designing clothes was a passion of the Hungarian-born American fashion designer, writer and textile artist Mariska Kárász (Budapest, 1898-Danbury, USA, 1960). She made colourful garments with varied patterns, which were primarily inspired by Hungarian folk art. She left Hungary in 1914, but her interest in fashion and talent attracted her to New York, not Paris. She learned to sew and embroider by herself. She visited Hungary several times after that: in 1925, 1926 and 1930.

Flo­wer Po­wer and the hip­pie mo­ve­ment

The hippie movement began in the United States in the early 1960s as a protest against the existing social structure and America's war activities. Initially, free-spirited youth moving to the Haight-Ashbury area of San Francisco were referred to as hippies – the term originally comes from the English word hipster.

Új be­mu­ta­tó: Vissza a for­rá­sok­hoz!

Vissza a forrásokhoz! címmel népzenei gyökerű kompozíciókból rendez hangversenyt január 27-én a Hagyományok Háza. Bartók és Kodály darabjai mellett felcsendül Dr. Kelemen László Piros, fekete (Te Deum) című műve a Miskolci Szimfonikus Zenekar, a debreceni Kodály Kórus, Pál István Szalonna és Bandája és Pál Eszter népdalénekes tolmácsolásában, vezényel Cser Ádám. 

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