Masquers Historical Costume Collection on Display
A portion of the Masquers Historical Costume Collection is on view in the Brooks Gallery
of Wallman Hall on the Fairmont State campus through May 19.
The exhibition is held in conjunction with National Historic Preservation Week. The
exhibition is free and open to the public. For more information, call Curator Marian
J. Hollinger at (304) 367-4300.
During the spring semester of 1998, in anticipation of the Fairmont State Masquers
75th Anniversary celebration, Jo Ann Lough, speech and theatre professor emerita,
and Dr. Beth Thorne Newcome, professor of historic costume and fashion design, began
a collaborative project to retire the historical clothing and related artifacts (1850-1950)
from the Masquers theatrical wardrobe. This led to the establishment of the Masquers
Historical Costume Collection.
The purpose of this project is to preserve this unique collection of vintage apparel
and accessories that represent contributions made to the university from the communities
in and around Marion County and North Central West Virginia and to make the collection
available to FS students, faculty and to the public at large for research and historical
record, pattern drafting, material culture exploration, visual history study and costume
reproduction.
Assisted by students from Newcome's course in History of Contemporary Fashion, this
beginning activity culminated in April 1998, with the first public exhibition of 36
garments from the collection. The exhibition was well received by the institution
and community and stimulated an awareness of and enthusiasm for this and similar collections
of academic value.
Polly Willman, Historic Costumer Consultant, Preservation Services for Costumes and
Textiles, Arlington, Va., presented a lecture in 1999 called "Conserving Historic
Costume: A Key to our Identity" and helped to screen and provide an assessment of
the approximately 10,000 items in the Masquers collection. This was done to determine
the collection's academic value and to assist in making a long-range plan for the
preservation of the collection. A digitally-photographed record of the materials in
the collection will, ultimately, form a computerized catalogue of the items. This,
in turn, will become a prized resource to be utilized in theatre history courses,
community education and the West Virginia Folklife Center's material culture study.
For more information about the collection, call Dr. Beth Newcome at (304) 367-4298.