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Bag
1825-1850
Beads and pink satin
Gift of Mr. Hermanos
Object number68.126.32
Before the late eighteenth century, women typically wore pockets tied to their waists and hidden in skirts to carry their personal effects. The slim neoclassical silhouette eliminated pockets, necessitating reticules. Scholar Susan Hiner notes that the reticule was a controversial accessory. Whereas pockets were “modest” signifiers of “respectable femininity,” reticules were thought to reveal “the existence of the accoutrements of femininity and contain the arsenal of feminine seduction, which surely ought not to be made public.”
DescriptionBeaded reticule with pink satin drawstring top, symmetrical design with horizontal band of roses in shades of pink and green; crystal bead at bottom
Exhibitions