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FIT Oral histories project
US NNFIT SC.FITA.3.20.4.9 · sub-sub-series · 1967-2023
Parte de Academic Affairs records

This collection is comprised of oral history interviews with prominent twentieth- and twenty-first-century fashion industry businesspeople, designers, and artists, as well as members of the FIT faculty and staff.

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Symposia records
US NNFIT SC.FITA.3.10.1.2 · sub-sub-series · 2005-2022
Parte de Academic Affairs records

This collection includes the records for the annual day long Fashion and Textile Studies: History, Theory, Museum Practice Symposium. Each year a theme is selected and the graduate students present papers relating to the theme. Included are students papers, print version of their presentations, advertising materials for the symposium, and schedule of events. Further accruals are expected.

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Symposium records
US NNFIT SC.FITA.3.10.1.2.27 · folder · 2016
Parte de Academic Affairs records

Includes the papers and presentation delivered at the 2016 Symposium The names of the presenters and the title of their presentations contained in this folder are: Elisa Koizumi "Imagining a Revolution: a case study, The Black Panthers" ; Taylor Elyse Anderson "Tragedy, Sensationalism, and Cloth: A Theoretical Look at Jacqueline Kennedy's Pink Suit" ; Ilene Hacker "Jacques Estrel's 1971 Collection and the Gender Crisis of the 1970s" ; Doris Domoszlai-Lantner "Constructing A Soviet Narrative: Jean Paul Gaultier's Russian Constructivist Collection, 1986" ; Naomi Sosnovsky "I Gave Gold for Iron: Theme of Patriotism in Berlin Ironwork Jewelry" .

Symposium records
US NNFIT SC.FITA.3.10.1.2.13 · folder · 2010
Parte de Academic Affairs records

Includes the advertisitng flyer, schedule of events, papers, and presentations delivered at the 2010 Symposium "Americans in Paris: Designers, Buyers, Editors, Photographers, Models, and Clients in Paris Fashion" which occurred on Saturday, May 8, 2010. Six Graduate Students from the Department of Fashion and Textile Studies: History, Theory, Museum Practice delivered presentations. Each presenter's paper and presentation is represented. Karen Trivette Cannell and Patty Sicular delivered the welcoming addresses, but their presentations are not included in the file. The names of the presenters and the title of their presentations contained in this folder are: Nicole Bloomfield, "From Shopping in Paris to Hitler's Bathtub: Thérèse Bonney and Lee Miller;" Sarah Byrd, "Adopted by Paris Fashion: Marc Jacobs & Karl Lagerfeld;" Michelle Kauffman, "The Couture Client as Patron of the Art of Fashion."

Ellen Goldstein interview, 1994 December 15
US NNFIT SC.FITA.3.20.4.9.4.7 · Item · 1994 December 15
Parte de Academic Affairs records

Ellen Goldstein, the Chair of the Accessories Design and Millinery Department, started with FIT’s Fashion Design Department as a part-time instructor. In 1981, the school received a federal grant for industries affected by imports and was able to start an accessories department. With additional support from the industry, the department has taken off. Goldstein explains her beginnings as a tapestry weaver and how she got into handbag design. She then describes the demographics of her department’s diverse student body. She discusses how both the 1-year and 2-year program are feeding the accessories industry and how FIT’s millinery program has revitalized an industry thought to be dead.

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