WASHINGTON ā Jill Biden says her Inauguration Day outfits, now featured in a Smithsonian museum exhibit about first ladies, were a āvoice for me on one of the most important days of my life.ā
The dresses ā one blue, one white ā with matching coats and face masks āspoke to the American people then, and now they will continue speaking to generations to come,ā she said Wednesday, before mannequins dressed in her clothes were formally added to the exhibit.
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āThey will help tell not only my story, but the story of what Americans experienced together,ā the first lady said at the museum. It was her first public appearance in two weeks, following the removal of a cancerous lesion from her face and another one from her chest.
āThis day is so much more emotional than I ever imagined it to be,ā she said.
First ladies typically donate their inaugural ball gown to the Smithsonian Institution, but President Joe Biden had no such celebrations. He took office at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic when such large indoor gatherings were discouraged.
So Jill Biden parted with the ocean blue tweed dress and coat that she wore to her husbandās swearing-in at the Capitol on Jan. 20, 2021, and the ivory silk wool dress and cashmere coat she wore at the White House that evening. They were designed by Alexandra OāNeill, founder and designer of Markarian, and Gabriela Hearst, founder and creative director of Gabriela Hearst, respectively.
In recognition of the historic nature of the inauguration, the face masks the first lady wore were also added to The First Ladies Collection at the National Museum of American History.
She praised both designers, who spoke at the ceremony. Jill Biden said she met OāNeill when the designer was just starting out.
āHer designs seemed both timeless and new, and that was exactly what I was hoping to find, because young people showed up and voted for Joe in historic numbers, and I wanted to reflect the passion, creativity and hope that day,ā the first lady said.
She credited Hearst with always pushing her to āstep out of my comfort zoneā and try new things.
āBut I didnāt need any convincing about the design of this dress,ā Jill Biden said. āMy focus on Inauguration Day was being a first lady for all Americans,ā and Hearst understood.
āShe adorned this dress with the flowers of every American state and territory. And she placed Delaware, my home, just above my heart,ā Jill Biden said.
Hearst said it's hard to believe her work will be in the exhibit.
āI have to pinch myself,ā she said. Addressing the first lady, Hearst said, āAs a designer, I couldn't think of a better muse.ā
Jill Biden said the face masks are small pieces of cloth but they ārepresent the enormity of what we all faced at the time: A pandemic that has changed our world forever.ā
Afterward, the mannequins were installed in the exhibit, which is among the Smithsonian Institutionās most popular attractions. It features inaugural gowns worn by first ladies Jacqueline Kennedy, Laura Bush, Michelle Obama, Melania Trump and others. The museum will reopen to the public on Thursday.
Since Helen Taft in 1912, every first lady who has been approached by the Smithsonian and who has an inaugural gown has donated it, said Lisa Kathleen Graddy, a curator of American political history at the museum.
The museum is āalways interestedā in having both the daytime and evening outfits to āshow a different aspect of the day and the first ladyās participationā in the inauguration, but most of them just give up the inaugural ball gown, she said.
āWe are very lucky that we have the space in this particular case to be able to display bothā from Biden, Graddy said.
Jill Biden thanked āthe teamā for helping her āat a time when we just couldnāt fly to New York to do in-person fittings," as well as her family and staff for their support.
āItās really an honor to serve as your first lady,ā she said, as her voice cracked with emotion.