Fashion meets socialism : fashion industry in the Soviet Union after the second world war
Autor
Gronow, Jukka
Zhuravlev, Sergey
Institución
Resumen
Fashion and design would, in the West, commonly be seen as antithetical
to the values of Soviet society. Awareness was, and is, high in relation to
the accomplishments of the Soviet Union in the area of scientic progress
in the late 1950s and early 1960s and even the leading powers in the West
looked on sputniks and cosmonauts with envy and admiration. At that time
overall economic growth in the USSR was quite impressive, and its leaders’
pompous statements about overcoming the production levels of the USA in
many basic industrial products and food-stus did not seem at all farfetched.
What was less generally known however was that, during this period, the
Soviet Union made major investments in fashion design. Promoting fashion
and improving the standards of clothing was as important as the general
politics of material culture in the Soviet Union.
e Soviet Union has certainly never enjoyed a high reputation in the
world of fashion. e standardized, industrially mass-produced clothes
were held in low esteem by both Soviet consumers and foreign visitors. If
anything, Soviet citizens were generally dissatised with the domestic supply
of clothing. To foreign visitors, street fashion in Moscow, not to mention
smaller provincial towns or the countryside, looked rather dull, uniform
and grey. Interestingly at this time, the Soviet Union had one of the world’s
largest organizations of fashion design, all planned, nanced and supported
by the state. ousands of professional, well-educated designers worked in
the various Soviet institutions of fashion. ey designed according to the
annual plan thousands of new fashionable garments and accessories both
for industrial mass production and for smaller fashion ateliers that sewed
custom made clothes for their customers.