Dr Danielle Sprecher

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Menswear Curator

Westminster School of Arts

(United Kingdom) +44 20 7911 5000 ext 67950
Harrow Campus
Watford Road
Northwick Park
GB
HA1 3TP

About me

A dress historian and curator, I have worked with a wide range of dress and textile collections. These have included the Goldsmiths Textile Collection, Leeds Museums and Galleries designated costume and textile collection, the collection of the Quilters’ Guild of the British Isles, and Colchester and Ipswich Museum Service. I curated exhibitions, facilitated audience engagement and events and led on collections management and documentation projects. Before working as a specialist costume curator I worked in libraries, in the exhibitions department at the Victoria and Albert Museum and taught fashion history and theory.

My AHRC funded doctoral research project ‘Fashion for the High Street: The Design and Making of Menswear in Leeds 1945-1980’ revealed the often overlooked but highly significant role of the Leeds multiple tailors in the history of British men’s clothing and fashion. These companies included the national chains of Montague Burton Ltd (now Arcadia) and Joseph Hepworth & Sons (which became Next in the 1980s). The study took a dress historical approach combining object study, oral history and personal accounts, company archives and trade literature to look at the design, production and consumption of the men’s tailoring made by the Leeds multiples. The research was undertaken in collaboration with Leeds Museums and Galleries.

Teaching

I have taught fashion history and theory and take an object-based and material culture approach to teaching. My current teaching is focused on utilising the Westminster Menswear Archive to support fashion design students' research but also to facilitate the use of the collection for students and teaching staff across the university.

Research

The history of menswear and masculinities is the main focus of my research. I am particularly interested in the use of methodologies such as object study and oral history to reveal the richness and diversity of men's experiences and relationships with their clothing in the past. My research also investigates the relationships between design, production and consumption of fashion and clothing with an emphasis on mass produced and everyday dress.

Publications

For details of all my research outputs, visit my WestminsterResearch profile.