Jennifer Tiramani

Fellowship Year: 

2009

Project Title: 

Clothing for the Warrior and the Courtier: Patterns of Sixteenth Century European Court Dress

Tiramani examined items of 16th century European dress in the ROM’s collection with a special focus on a rare brigandine dating to 1500-1530, an item associated with royalty and courtiers. Functionally, a comparable modern-day garment would be a bullet-proof vest, although the ROM’s brigandine is much more sumptuous and decorative, being made of deep red velvet, and the interior protective metal plates are held in place with decorative brass rivets. Her experience as a costume designer greatly influenced her research and interpretation of the garments. She approached the garments with a deep practical and technical knowledge. Her lecture discussed the cut and construction of many 16th century items held by the ROM, highlighting the decorative techniques used and the interaction between armour and clothing, and how this knowledge can provide deeper context into interpreting Shakespeare’s texts for stage productions.

About the Fellow: 

Jennifer Tiramani has worked as a stage and costume designer since 1977. She was Associate Designer for Theatre Royal, Stratford East from 1979 to 1997, Director of Theatre Design at Shakespeare’s Globe from 1997 to 2005, and at the time of her Gervers’ fellowship was Resident Designer of Mark Rylance’s Phoebus Cart Theatre Company as well as a costume designer for the Metropolitan Opera, New York. Tiramani is based in the U.K.

Related Publications: 

“Jenny Tiramani, Janet Arnold, & the School of Historical Dress, Part 1.” Interview on Fashion History with American Duchess podcast. 5 October 2018. https://soundcloud.com/americanduchess/episode-21-jenny-tiramani-janet-a...

“Jenny Tiramani, Janet Arnold, & the School of Historical Dress, Part 2.” Interview on Fashion History with American Duchess podcast. 12 October 2018. https://soundcloud.com/americanduchess/episode-22-part-2-with-jenny-tira...

The School of Historical Dress, http://theschoolofhistoricaldress.org.uk/

Authored by: Kait Sykes

Authored by: Kait Sykes