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Mediating Faith and Style: Museums Awake to Muslim Fashions

“Contemporary Muslim Fashions” at the de Young Museum. Clockwise from left, an abaya by Wadha (Wadha Al-Hajri), a Qatari designer, in silk organza with cutwork and embroidery; Faiza Bouguessa, geometric abaya dress with belt; Haslinda Rahim, praying dress; Rasit Bagzibagli, dress and head scarf.Credit...Peter Prato for The New York Times

SAN FRANCISCO — When Max Hollein announced his idea two years ago for a sweeping exhibition of Muslim fashions at the de Young Museum here, where he was director, he received some “very intense reactions,” he recalled. And the criticisms came from surprisingly different factions.

“I got a number of emails complaining, some in very harsh terms, that this is not the right time for America to celebrate Muslim culture,” Mr. Hollein said. “On the other hand, there were also people accusing us of celebrating the oppression of women.” (Breitbart News Daily questioned whether it was “a celebration of subjugation.”)The museum also heard from people of Islamic faith who found the notion of “fashion” antithetical to the religion’s modest dress codes. For them, the very idea of the show seemed sacrilege.

“We knew from the start we were entering new territory,” said Mr. Hollein, now the director at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, taking a break last week from his new job to attend the opening of “Contemporary Muslim Fashions,” his first — and last — major show at the de Young. Mr. Hollein was wearing a dark blue Zegna suit that looked rather plain compared to a peacock-colored gown on display nearby.

“The idea wasn’t to provoke,” he said. “We wanted to share what we’ve been seeing in Muslim fashion with the larger world in a way that could create a deeper understanding. Museums are one of the few places where you can have a deep and non-polemic debate about the intersection of cultures. On other platforms, people either have superficial conversations — or just yell at each other.”

“Contemporary Muslim Fashions,” which runs through Jan. 6, has received largely appreciative reviews. It explores the fusion of faith and fashion, modesty and modernity.

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A silk satin ensemble (cape, head scarf and skirt) from 2017 by Dian Pelangi, a rising designer from Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country.Credit...Peter Prato for The New York Times

The 80 ensembles on display were all designed to cover the body in keeping with Islamic principles. They range from updated versions of the traditional cloak known as the abaya, to relaxed, hip-hop inspired sportswear for Muslim youth by the London designer Sarah Elenany, to the richly textured ensembles crafted with batik and ikat fabrics by the rising Indonesian designers Dian Pelangi (who has nearly five million Instagram followers) and Khanaan Luqman Shamlan. The show also includes videos of newsworthy events, including the controversial French bans on the burkini, the full-body swimsuit, in 2016, and the 2018 hijab-shedding in Iran.

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Scouts Hoodie by Sarah Elenany, 2013.Credit...Peter Prato for The New York Times

The choice of whether to wear a hijab, the head scarf covering the hair, carries great religious, political and cultural weight for Muslim women in many countries. That is, assuming they have the choice: this year has seen multiple protests and arrests in Iran over the law mandating hijabs for women there. So how did an art museum in San Francisco — without a single Muslim curator on staff — go about navigating the potential minefields of such a survey?

Mr. Hollein is not one of the exhibition’s curators. But he has served as its leading advocate at key points, describing “Contemporary Muslim Fashions” as a “seismograph” for a particular sociopolitical moment.

“If you tell people you’re doing a show on Claude Monet, everyone says: See you at the opening,” the Vienna-born museum leader said. “But this show is clearly more challenging, more complex. As a director sometimes your job is to create confidence in a show.”

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A burkini by Shereen Sabet, 2017: top, skirted pants, swim hood.Credit...Peter Prato for The New York Times

He started paying attention to Muslim fashions four years ago while traveling to Tehran for his work as director of the Städel Museum in Frankfurt. He noticed the “vibrancy” of the city’s fashion scene, where “women were using the mandated hijab to express their own individuality,” he recalled.

Back home, he watched with curiosity as Nike launched its high-profile “Pro Hijab” line for athletes. He was struck by the size of this fast-growing market, with Muslim consumers spending an estimated $243 billion on clothing in 2015, and projections that this would reach $368 billion by 2021, according to an economic report from Thomson Reuters in collaboration with the research firm DinarStandard. The buzzword for the field, which now has its own bloggers and fashion weeks, is “modest fashion,” a catchall category for loose, body-covering clothing whether worn by women following their religion’s guidelines or those seeking personal comfort.

Soon after arriving at the San Francisco museum in 2016, Mr. Hollein brought the idea for the show to Jill D’Alessandro and Laura L. Camerlengo, the textile and costume curators at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, which includes the de Young. That museum has a history of staging popular exhibitions on fashion designers like Yves St. Laurent or Jean Paul Gaultier, organized in collaboration with the fashion houses. With this survey of Muslim fashions, Mr. Hollein pushed the museum “to do more rigorous scholarship.”

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A Dian Pelangi ensemble with cap, head scarf, top, jacket, skirt, and pants, for New York Fashion Week 2017.Credit...Peter Prato for The New York Times

“Max is the ideal museum leader in that he asks you tough questions, and then lets you run with it,” Ms. D’Alessandro, the chief curator of costume and textile arts, said. Asked if he ever got cold feet about the show, she said, “Fear is not a Max thing.”

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Max Hollein, with a design by Bill Gaytten for Christian Dior, and ones by Jean Paul Gaultier and Karl Lagerfeld, at the de Young Museum in San Francisco.Credit...Peter Prato for The New York Times

They persuaded Reina Lewis, a professor of cultural studies at the London College of Fashion at the University of the Arts London and leading expert on modest fashion — which she calls “a cross-faith movement” — to come aboard. “There hasn’t been any exhibition of this size or scale before,” Ms. Lewis said, noting that “Cherchez la Femme” by the Jewish Museum in Berlin focused on headcoverings; another precedent was “Faith Fashion Fusion: Muslim Women’s Style in Australia.”

The de Young’s working title, “The Fashion of Islam,” did not sit well with Ms. Lewis. “I would never talk about Muslim fashion in the singular and expect it to be just one thing,” she said.

At Ms. Lewis’s urging, the curators invited dozens of Muslim representatives from local universities, Islamic centers and mosques to consult on the show. A Bay Area fashion stylist, Saba Ali, remembers a lively conversation in early 2017 with “some people saying there’s no such thing as Islamic fashion, since the faith says you should not be ostentatious,” she said. “I don’t see it that way,” she added, “because Muslim women in different parts of the world have different ways of expressing their faith, but the curators were very gracious in making sure all feedback was considered.”

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Mr. Hollein helped the de Young secure a loan of couture gowns from Sheikha Moza bint Nasser of Qatar. Left, Mr. Gaytten, gown and turban, 2012; center, Mr. Gaultier ensemble: gown, obi, and turban, 2016; right, Mr. Lagerfeld ensemble: dress, cape and turban, 2011. The dome is by Hariri & Hariri, the Iranian-born architects.Credit...Peter Prato for The New York Times

Ms. Lewis said she was prepared to encounter a range of prejudices and stereotypes. “Some people say if you’re dressing modestly, it’s not modest enough,” she said. “Other Muslim women might say, ‘Allah loves beauty, it’s part of my religious practice to dress smartly and aesthetically.’ ”

The curators also heard the feminist critique that Muslim coverings like hijabs are symbols of patriarchal oppression. Ms. Lewis’s perspective is that “some women try to create change from within, and that we all live complex and contradictory lives.” She also noted that some women wear a hijab on occasion, or for particular stretches of time, and that it’s not always a clear-cut case of allegiance or rejection.

The exhibition reflects this sense of variety and fluidity, challenging some stereotypes of Muslim culture. For example, while some mannequins wear hijabs, others go bareheaded. And the hijabs appear in a striking array of colors and styles. The museum ended up hiring Ms. Ali to style them in different manners, reflecting, she said, how she wraps her own scarf “according to the occasion.”

As the designer Ms. Pelangi put it: “Some people say the hijab is a tool of oppression but the right platform like this one can show that it’s not all dark and black. A hijab can also be expressive, a way of showing who we are without needing to speak.”

(The curators notably did not include any examples of the face-covering burqa, with Ms. D’Alessandro explaining that “it didn’t fit our focus on contemporary fashion — it’s not something we see designers in our show doing.”)

Mr. Hollein, whose wife, Nina, is a fashion designer, did not select the designers for the show. But he did help secure a major loan from Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, the wife of the former emir of Qatar: four gowns by Jean Paul Gaultier and Karl Lagerfeld, among other couturiers.

He also shaped the look of the show, commissioning the New York-based, Iranian-born architects Gisue Hariri and Mojgan Hariri to create a strong and “authentic” exhibition design.

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From the Qatari designer Wadha Al-Hajri, whose brand is Wadha: silk organza with cutwork and embroidery, 2017.Credit...Peter Prato for The New York Times

They have created a sleek, quasi-futuristic setting that riffs on traditional Muslim screens and arches, culminating in two large, white domes that curve over the mannequins. The domes are made from a semi-opaque white fabric with large arches cut out, creating a dramatic veiling effect.

Gisue Hariri said the project was especially meaningful for her team at a time when Muslim women “are being increasingly targeted for using their fashion choices to assert their independence and identity.” But she said she didn’t want the exhibition, which features white pedestals against black walls, to appear bleak.

“We didn’t want the exhibition to be dark, veiled and impenetrable, like stereotypes of Muslim culture,” she said. “We wanted it to reflect what the fashion was showing us: something light, powerful and beautiful.”

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section AR, Page 17 of the New York edition with the headline: Fusion of Muslim Faith and Style. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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