New Charleston Museum exhibition is fashion-forward

New Charleston Museum exhibition is fashion-forward

What’s in fashion right now in Charleston’s cultural world? In a word, it’s fashion.
In a moment of national soul-searching, it might at first seem like a disconnect to get in touch with the outer self.

But in times weighted by complex social dynamics, style has frequently made a statement. Whether to uplift, provoke or pose questions, fashion finds its way into the conversation.
Take as a recent example the Superfine: Tailoring Black Style exhibition this year at the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Images from its star-studded, brilliantly garbed gala enthralled social media for days.

One of the pieces in the Met exhibition, an 1830s jockey suit made by an enslaved plantation tailor, was borrowed from the Charleston Museum. Its Historic Textiles Collection is the largest collection in the Southeast, with more than 10,000 objects at any given time.

‘Reimagined Fashion’

The Charleston Museum has bounteous material for Reimagined Fashion: Creations of the Future Past. Through Jan. 18, 2026, the exhibition curatorially weaves layers, textures and materials in ways suggesting that in Charleston, past and present, we are what we wear.

Photo courtesy Charlesotn Museum Credit: Photos courtesy Charlesotn Museum

Virginia Theerman, its curator of historic textiles, envisions fashion to be a recurring initiative, which expands a previous, one-night-only offering that took place in 2019 before her arrival the following year.

“We loved the idea of getting local creatives in to look at the collection and take advantage of this wellspring of inspiration we have here behind closed doors,” she said. Moving to Charleston, she was quickly impressed by the creative sector, and invested in showcasing the work they are doing in this community.

“I think we’re seeing the pendulum swing back from online shopping,” she said, noting that people want to be more viscerally, tactilely involved.

With this in mind, she tapped 19 sought-after local makers spanning artistic backgrounds, methods of expression and imaginative perspectives, who have set their mind and honed their skills on everything from dressmaking to jewelry design. Theerman invited them to comb through the collection, to then fashion works inspired by the old to image something altogether new.



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