:Cooper-Hewitt will present "Extreme Textiles: Designing for High
Performance," the first museum exhibition devoted to the subject
of technical textiles - highly engineered materials designed for
ultimate performance in extreme conditions - on April 8. The
exhibition will present more than 150 textile applications from a
wide range of areas, including architecture, apparel, medicine,
transportation, aerospace and the environment.
"The goal of this exhibition is to reveal the incredible breadth
of areas in which textiles are being used and to provide
inspiration for new approaches to design," said Matilda McQuaid,
exhibitions curator and head of Cooper-Hewitt's textile
department. "In addition, the exhibition will share the intrinsic
beauty of technical textiles and acknowledge the enormous
influence they have in our lives."
The objects featured in the exhibition will be organized in terms
of their high performance characteristics - safer, stronger,
lighter, faster, smarter - and displayed throughout the museum
campus, including the first- and second-floor exhibition
galleries, the Great Hal and the Arthur Ross Terrace and Garden.
"Extreme Textiles" will explore the recent advancements in
technical textiles and reference the museum's own textile
collection in order to illustrate historical examples of textile
structures and techniques - such as weaving, knitting, braiding
and embroidery - that continue to be used in the most pioneering
textiles today.
These age-old techniques, in combination with the tremendous
advances in the fields of science and engineering, have
contributed to the production of textiles that are more dynamic
and versatile than ever before. Developments in polymer
technology have resulted in fibers that are stronger than steel,
but retain textiles' traditional advantage of flexibility. These
extraordinary new fibers are employed in a number of
high-performance situations, ranging from the strongest rope ever
fabricated, the Marlow Super Line, which features a break load of
2,000 tons; woven shipping containers that transport millions of
ton of raw materials, pharmaceuticals and food stuffs around the
world; and soft polyester slings, capable of lifting 50 tons,
that are replacing steel chains for heavy lifting.
The emergence of smart textiles, which incorporate computer and
telecommunication technologies, allow for a wealth of new
responsive devices, especially in the apparel and home
furnishings industries. Examples of smart textiles on display
will include touch-on light switches made out of pom-poms,
tassels of fur and an interactive, playful musical rope
installation by Squid:Labs that will explore the idea of smart
cables or ropes that can track and self-monitor exerted
stress/strain loads. The US Army's Objective Force Warrior
Program integrates electronic systems into the basic soldier
uniform, enabling the possibility of undergarments that
continuously monitor the vital signs of the wearer.
These revolutionary innovations and achievements in textile
design and engineering have forged partnerships in the fields of
science, industry and design. "Extreme Textiles" reveals how
technical textiles have already become an integral part of daily
life and forecasts how textiles will undoubtedly continue to
shape lives in the future.
"Extreme Textiles" will be on view until January 15, 2006. The
Cooper-Hewitt is at 2 East 91 Street. For information,
212-849-8400 or www.cooperhewitt.org.