LONDON —
Britain’s most extensive exhibition of African fashion is set to open in
London, showcasing designers past and present, as well as the continent’s
diverse heritage and cultures.
اضافة اعلان
“Africa Fashion”,
at the
Victoria and Albert (V&A) Museum from Saturday, is also the
country’s first exhibition dedicated to the medium.
Project curator
Elisabeth Murray said the show will provide a “glimpse into the glamour and
politics of the fashion scene”.
“We wanted to
celebrate the amazing African fashion scene today. So the creativity of all the
designers, stylists, photographers, and looking at the inspiration behind
that,” she told AFP.
Included in the
exhibition are objects, sketches, photos, and film from across the continent,
starting from the African liberation years in the 1950s to 1980s to
up-and-coming contemporary designers.
Senior curator
Christine Checinska has called it “part of the V&A’s ongoing commitment to
foreground work by African heritage creatives”.
Global anti-racism
movements, including
Black Lives Matter, have forced Britain to reassess its
divisive colonial past, from museum collections and public monuments to history
teaching in schools.
The V&A was
founded in 1852, as Britain under queen Victoria expanded its global empire,
including, in the decades that followed, in Africa.
But Checinska said
African creativity had “largely been excluded or misrepresented in the museum,
owing to the historic division between art and ethnographic museums arising
from our colonial roots and embedded racist assumptions”.
“The conversations
and collaborations that have shaped the making of the Africa Fashion exhibition
are a testbed for new equitable ways of working together that allow us to
imagine and call into being the V&A of the future,” she added.
Displaying a
diverse range of African designs, textiles, and influences, the ambitious
exhibition is a way to address that imbalance, she said.
Celebration
The scene is set with a section on “African Cultural Renaissance”,
highlighting protest posters and literature from independence movements that
developed in conjunction with fashion.
“The Vanguard” is
the central attraction, displaying iconic works by well-known African designers
including Niger’s Alphadi, Nigeria’s Shade Thomas-Fahm and Kofi Ansah of
Ghana.
A variety of
African textiles and styles such as beadwork and raffia are employed in
innovative designs with cross-cultural influences.
The conversations and collaborations that have shaped the making of the Africa Fashion exhibition are a testbed for new equitable ways of working together that allow us to imagine and call into being the V&A of the future.
Thomas-Fahm’s
designs, for example, reinvented traditional African-wear for the “cosmopolitan,
working woman”.
Other displays —
with names such as “Afrotopia”, “Cutting-Edge” and “Mixology” — explore fashion
alongside issues such as sustainability, gender, race, and others.
One highlight is
the center-piece made by Moroccan designer Artsi especially for the exhibition.
It is a piece
inspired by the
British trench coat and Muslim hijab, navigating how to
“present Africa in England”, he told AFP.
Fashioning a
“meditation on our common humanity”, Artsi emphasizes the beauty of African
fashion which “doesn’t come from a source of commercialized clothes”.
“It comes from a source of
heritage and celebrating culture,” he added.
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