American Federation of German Folk Dance Groups
Home ] Organization History ] Officers ] Purpose Statement ] Membership ] Calendar of Events ] Events ] 2011 March_April Newsletter ] Resources ] [ Internet Links ] Archives ] What is New ] Help ]

 

   

INTERNET LINKS

 

German-American Heritage Museum of the USA

Washington, D.C.

http://gahmusa.org/gahm/gahm.html

German American Heritage Museum-42177
Click image for museum flyer

 

Costume Exhibit- by Karen Gottier

thru February 2013

Informative Panel
Carpathian - German

Slovakia

Town of Topparz

"Zimmerman on the Road"

(rough carpenter)

This trade still hikes for two years and a day.  They

still have to go on foot, find a job for a time, and then

travel on.  They must be single, have insurance, have 

no debt, and be a full fledged Journey Man.

Transylvanian Saxon

Romania

Burzenland

Schwaben District

Hessia

Single Girl

(Married women wear green bonnets)

Transylvanian Saxon

Bistritz, Romania

Festival Dress- Ochsenfest

Frankonia

 

Island of Föhn

North Friesland

 

     Enclosed are several Photos and a flyer about the German-American Heritage Museum in Washington, DC.

     There are also several photos of a costume exhibit I had been asked to do for them. The exhibit runs through Feb. 2013. On display are 14 German costumes from various regions as well as some of the Germans outside of Germany (Heimatvertriebene) The costumes are antique and were actually worn by women who never wore modern clothes.

 

     Many German-American festivals are opportunities to see Dirndl and Lederhosen fashions in all varieties. But it is the dance groups who can verge at the annual Steuben Parade or at many local and regional "Oktoberfests" that illustrate the multitude of traditional costumes. While native dresses prescribe who wears what, when and how, the Dirndl and Lederhosen dresses are not native dresses but folklore fashion. They are subject to fashion changes and have created a whole fashion industry.

     What our Museum shows are "Trachten" - German costumes - generally limited in design to their traditional form for a given region or necessity. We have 15 colorful and wonderfully embroidered and decorated tradtional costumes on display. Their origins reach from Bavaria to Westphalia, from Fresia to the Blackforest and from former German settlements in Rumania to the Zipser Germans of the high Tatra in Slovakia.

     Even though traditional costumes today have lost most of their importance and do not play a major role in their globalized and leveled society, people still wear them in many places and on special occasions. That is especially true for German-Americans who successfully are trying to keep their ethnic, culture and identities alive. With our exhibit, we are trying to support their activities and inform and educate a larger audience about the still existing varieties of German traditions and cultures living amongst German-Americans in the United States.

 

 

 

Hit Counter

 

Page Author: Thomas C. Thornton, M.D., webmaster.  The views and opinions expressed in this page are strictly those of the page author.  The contents of this page have not been approved by the American Federation of German Folk Dance Groups (AFGFDG) and remain the property of the author/copyright owner.  Some pages will be updated on a regular schedule.  Suggestions or fixes are welcome but may take weeks to months to be incorporated.  Anyone may link freely to anything on this page and print any page for personal use.  However, page contents, structure and format, and design elements, cannot be copied or republished without the express written permission of the page author/copyright owner.  If you have any questions, please email the AFGFDG webmaster at:  tcthornton@sbcglobal.net   .