Monokini



The monokini was originally a topless swimsuit that exposed the female breasts and in modern designs features large cut-outs at the sides, front and back. It can also refer to the bottom piece of a bikini which is sometimes referred to as a unikini.

 The topless design was first conceived by designer Rudi Gernreich in 1963 as a protest against repressive society. He initially did not intend to produce the design commercially,   but was persuaded by Susanne Kirtland of  Look  to make it available to the public. When the first photograph of the swimsuit modeled by  Peggy Moffitt  was published in  Womens Wear Daily  on June 4, 1962, it generated a great deal of controversy in the United States and internationally. The suit was first worn publicly by  Carol Doda  in San Francisco at the Condor Nightclub. That event ushered in the era of  topless nightclubs  in the United States.

Topless monokini
Austrian-American fashion designer Rudi Gernreich had strong feelings about the sexualization of the human body and the notion that the body was essentially shameful.Gernrich grew up in Austria where its citizens were advocates of exercising nude, a rejection of the over-civilized world. His father was a stocking manufacturer who had died when Gernreich was 8. In 1939. his mother took him and they fled the country to escape Hitler, who among other things had banned nudity. In New York City, Gernreich was an open nudist and became a gay activist and advocate of sexual liberation, co-founding in 1950 the Mattachine Society.He thought government restraints on nudity were fascist and oppressive.

Gernreich had developed a reputation as an avant-garde designer who broke many of the rules. His swimsuit designs up to this point were unconventional. In its December 1962 issue, Sports Illustrated remarked, "He has turned the dancer's leotard into a swimsuit that frees the body. In the process, he has ripped out the boning and wiring that made American swimsuits seagoing corsets." That month he first envisioned creating a topless swimsuit which he called a monokini. He predicted that "bosom will be uncovered within five years." He saw baring of a woman's breasts as a form of freedom.

At the end of 1963, Susanne Kirtland of Look called Gernreich and asked him to make the suit to accompany a trend story along futuristic lines. He resisted the idea at first, but since he had predicted its emergence, he didn't want another designer like Emilio Pucci to design it and get credit. Although he felt the swimsuit ought to just be bikini bottoms, he realized that this wouldn't constitute a unique design. He initially designed a Balinese sarong that began just under the breasts, but Kirtland didn't feel the design was bold enough and needed to make more of a statement. Gernreich instead chose a design that ended around mid-torso and was supported by two straps between the breasts and around the neck.

When a photo shoot was arranged on Montego Bay in the Bahamas, all five models hired for the session refused to wear the design. The photographer finally persuaded a local prostitute to model it. A back view of it was published in Look on June 2, 1964.

[edit] Design as a statement
To avoid sensationalizing the design, Claxton, Moffitt, and Gernreich decided to publish their own pictures for the fashion press and news media. They made the picture available to a handful of news organizations, and on June 3, columnist Carol Bjorkman of Women's Wear Daily published a frontal view picture of Moffitt wearing the suit. Gernreich initially never intended to produce the swimsuit commercially. The design had more meaning to Gernreich as an idea than as a reality.He had Moffitt model the suit for Diana Vreeland of Vogue, who asked him why he conceived of the design. Gernreich told her he felt it was time for "freedom-in fashion as well as every other facet of life," but that the swimsuit was just a statement. He said, “[Women] drop their bikini tops already,” he said, “so it seemed like the natural next step.” She told him, "If there's a picture of it, it's an actuality. You must make it." Rudi Gerenrich said in television interview, "It may well be a bit much now. But, just wait. In a couple of years topless bikinis will be a reality and regarded as perfectly natural."

[edit] Gernreich's intent
Moffitt said the design was a logical evolution of Gernreich's avant-garde ideas in swimwear design as much as a scandalous symbol of the permissive society. She said, "He was trying to take away the prurience, the whole perverse side of sex." She said his design was "prophetic." "It had to do with more than what to wear to the beach. It was about a changing culture throughout all society, about freedom and emancipation. It was also a reaction against something particularly American: the little boy snickering that women had breasts." Gernreich told Time magazine in 1969, the monokini “is a natural development growing out of all the loosening up, the re-evaluation of values that’s going on. There is now an honesty hangup, and part of this is not hiding the body—it stands for freedom.”

The photograph of Moffitt in the monokini taken by her husband William Claxton became a celebrated image of the extremism of 1960s designs. The photograph was published by Life and numerous other publications, catapulting Moffitt into instant celebrity, reportedly resulting in her receiving everything from marriage proposals to death threats.

Moffitt and Claxton later wrote The Rudy Gernreich Book, an aesthetic biography of the fashion revolutionary, which was published by Taschen GmbH in 1999.

[edit] Cultural impact
There was a strong public reaction to the swimsuit design. The Soviet Union denounced the suit, saying it was "barbarism" and indicated "capitalistic decay".The Vatican renounced the swimsuit, and the L'Osservatore Romano said the "industrial-erotic adventure" of the topless bathing suit "negates moral sense." Many of Rudi's contemporaries in the fashion industry reacted negatively. Some Republicans tried to blame the suit on the Democrats' stance on moral issues.[  Gernreich introduced the monokini at a time when U.S. nudists were trying to establish their a public persona. The United States Postmaster General had banned nudist publications from the mail until 1958, when theSupreme Court of the United States declared that the naked body in and of itself could not be deemed obscene. Use of the word monokini was first recorded in English that year.

The New York City Police Department was strictly instructed by the commissioner of parks to arrest any woman wearing a monokini. In Chicago, a 19-year-old woman was fined US$100 for wearing a monokini on a public beach.In Dallas, Texas, when a local store featured the suit in a window display, members of the Carroll Avenue Baptist Mission picketed until they removed the display.

Copious coverage of the event helped to send the image of exposed breasts across the world. Women's clubs and the church were particularly active in their condemnation. In Italy and Spain, the church warned against the topless fashion.

At St. Tropez on the French Riviera, where toplessness later became the norm, the mayor ordered police to ban toplessness and to watch over the beach via helicopter. Jean-Luc Godard, a founding mover of French New Wavecinema, incorporated monokini footage shot by Jacques Rozier in Riviera into his film A Married Woman, but it was edited out by the censors.

A few defended his design. Fashion designers Geraldine Stutz, president of Henri Bendel, said, "I only wish I were young enough to be one of the pioneers myself." Carol Bjorkman, a columnist at Women's Wear-Daily's wrote, "What's the matter with the front? After all, it is here to stay, and it is awfully nice being a girl."

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Impact on public toplessness
Gernreich first sold the suit to the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Magnin_Co. Joseph Magnin department store] in San Francisco, where it was an instant hit. San Francisco Mayor John Shelley said, "topless is at the bottom of porn."On June 12, the San Francisco Chronicle featured a photo of woman in a monokini with her exposed breasts clearly visible on its front page. On June 22, 1964, the public relations manager of the Condor Nightclub in San Francisco's North Beach district gave former prune picker, file clerk, and waitress Carol Doda Gernreich's monokini to wear for her act. She was the first moderntopless dancer in the United States,, renewing the burlesque era of the early Twentieth Century in the U.S., and within a few days, women were baring their breasts in many of the clubs lining San Francisco's Broadway St., ushering in the era of the topless bar. In New York City, leading stores like B. Altman & Company, Lord & Taylor, Henri Bendel, Splendiferous and Parisette placed orders. On June 16, 1964, Gernreich's topless swimsuit went on sale in New York City. Despite the reaction of fashion critics and church officials, over 3000 monokinis at $24 each were purchased that summer.

In San Francisco, officials tolerated the topless bars until April 22, 1965, when the San Francisco Police Department arrested Doda on indecency charges. Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the police department, calling for release of both Doda and free speech activist Mario Savio, held in the same station. Doda rapidly became a symbol of sexual freedom, while topless restaurants, shoeshine parlors, ice-cream stands and girl bands proliferated in San Francisco and elsewhere. Journalist Earl Wilson wrote in his syndicated column, "Are we ready for girls in topless gowns? Heck, we may not even notice them." English designers created topless evening gowns inspired by the idea. The San Francisco Examiner published a real estate advertisement that promised "bare top swimsuits are possible here".

Impact on feminism

<span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;line-height:19.1875px;">In the  1960s<span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;line-height:19.1875px;">, the monokini influenced the  sexual revolution<span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;line-height:19.1875px;"> by emphasizing a woman's personal freedom of dress, even when her attire was provocative and exposed more skin than had been the norm during the more conservative  1950s<span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;line-height:19.1875px;">. <span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;line-height:19.1875px;"> Quickly renamed a "topless swimsuit", <span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;line-height:19.1875px;"> the design was never successful in the United States, although the issue of allowing both genders equal exposure above the waist has been raised as a feminist issue from time to time.

<span style="font-size:18px;color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;line-height:19.1875px;">Modern styles

<p style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;"> Modern monokinis are typically one-piece swimsuit that cover women's breasts and bottom. They are designed with large cut-outs   on the sides, back, or front. These are connected with varying fabrics, including mesh, chain, and other materials to link the top and bottom sections together. The appearance may not be functional but aesthetic. Some are designed with a  g-string  style back and others are designed for full coverage.

<p style="margin-top:0.4em;margin-bottom:0.5em;line-height:19.1875px;color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:sans-serif;">In 1985, Rudi Gernreich unveiled the lesser known pubikini, a bathing suit with a V-shaped opening that exposed the pubic area. This was his last design a few days before his death in Los Angeles.

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In popular culture
On October 30, 2008, one of Gernreich's original retail swimsuits was auctioned by Christie's for £1,250 ($2,075).A back view of a model wearing the swimsuit was featured on the cover of New York magazine on January 14, 2001.