The Art of Archiving the Artifact

DES4107.01
Course System Home Terms Fall 2025 The Art of Archiving the Artifact

Course Description

Summary

Historical Dress: The Park-McCullough Project Fall ‘25

Working in collaboration with the local Park-McCullough Historic Governor’s Mansion, students will create a new archive of the historic dress collection.

Archiving historical garments plays a vital role in preserving human history, allowing for research, understanding cultural shifts, and highlighting the social and economic contexts of the past. Archives serve as repositories for tangible pieces of history, enabling researchers to study clothing styles, materials, and construction techniques across different eras and cultures.  And in this collection the historic clothing provides a grounding in the lives of women who came before us. The collection represents a wealthy upper class family and the social milieus that that entails, but is a window into the handiwork and mending of working people, along with the refined craftsmanship of the couturiers of Paris and their New York counterparts. These 19th century garments represent hours of hand work and detail the shift from human to assisted mechanization to fully automated fabrication.  

Through researching and documenting the history of individual artifacts, students will explore the changing silhouette of the 19th century and the questions it poses about femininity and gender, learn the basics for cataloging, and explore the conversation of preservation vs restoration.

All classes will take place off campus at the Park-McCullough Mansion which is a 20-30 min walk from campus or drivable with parking. 

 

Learning Outcomes

  • Primary source research
  • Garment history
  • Organizational skills
  • Preservation vs Restoration Knowledge
  • Local history

Prerequisites

Determination will be given based on a statement of interest and submission of work in related areas of study. Preference will be given to students where their plan intersects with the course. Please submit statements of interest to the instructor by 1st May. Please reach out if you have questions!

Please contact the faculty member : tillygrimes@bennington.edu

Cross List

  • Curatorial Studies
  • History
  • Society, Culture, & Thought

Instructor

  • Tilly Grimes

Day and Time

WE 8:30am-12:10pm

Delivery Method

Fully in-person

Length of Course

1st seven weeks

Academic Term

Fall 2025

Credits

2

Course Level

4000

Maximum Enrollment

14

Course Frequency

One time only