(2/9/2012)
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MILWAUKEE - This summer, the Harley-Davidson Museum, in partnership
with the EMP Museum (formerly known as the Experience Music Project
Museum), will celebrate and pay tribute to the fascinating history of
one of the most enduring and iconic articles of clothing in our popular
culture – the black leather jacket.
Worn to be Wild: The Black
Leather Jacket runs June 16 through Sept. 3. The exhibit will walk
visitors through the evolution of the leather jacket, beginning with its
role as a solely functional piece of clothing meant to protect pilots
and motorcyclists from the elements, through its adoption by Hollywood
celebrities, rock stars and counter-culture youth as a symbol of
rebellion and cool, to its modern-day designs from fashion houses such
as Jean Paul Gaultier and Gianni Versace.
Worn to be Wild is the
first exhibit to chronicle the jacket’s many uses, and also the first
exhibit created by the Harley-Davidson Museum curatorial staff that will
travel to other venues following its run at the Museum. The exhibit
will be showcased at the EMP Museum in Seattle October 2012 through
February 2013 as well as other additional venues through the end of
2014.
“The leather jacket symbolizes different things for each
person who wears it, whether they are a motorcyclist, celebrity or a top
designer,” said Bill Davidson, Vice President of the Harley-Davidson
Museum. “This summer, the Harley-Davidson Museum is excited to introduce
all these unique stories in one place through the Worn to Be Wild: The
Black Leather Jacket exhibit, and for the first time, showcase how this
one garment has become an icon in pop culture and fashion.”
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