War Map Dress Trilogy
2003-2004
Lino blocks, hand-printed on Dupont silk, thread, zippers, mannequins, model airplanes, black paint.
The ingenuity of Christopher Clayton Hutton’s invention of silk maps for the British Royal Air Force during World War II enabled pilots to use lightweight and durable maps to help them reach safety in times of crisis, and inspired women to make dresses out of the silk maps as their men returned home. The maps used by Wren in the dresses were made in Europe by the Canadian government and shipped to Canada for families to follow the movements of their loved ones fighting in the war. Alluding to multiple layers of symbolism of the landscape in relation to the body, and reflecting on war and the politics of Feminism (viewpoint, memory, and identity), The War Map Dress Trilogy is more about history, location, distances, than it is about terrain.
Photo Credits
- Images 1-2: Tobey C. Anderson
- Images 3-9: Sandy Fairburn