“This show is a quiet and elegant kind of activism because it is an unbounded celebration of fashion in Africa,” Ms. Checinska said. “It centers on abundance, not on lack.”
Spread across two floors, the exhibition begins with a historical overview of the African independence and liberation years, from the late 1950s to 1994, and the cultural renaissance that was spurred by social and political reordering across the continent. The show explores the potency of cloth and its role in shaping national identity — notably in strategic political acts, as when Kwame Nkrumah, the Ghanaian prime minister, eschewed a suit for kente cloth to announce his country’s independence from British rule in 1957.
The show also highlights the importance of photographers like Sanlé Sory of Burkina Faso, who captured the youthquake shift of the 1960s, and whose work is displayed alongside a section dedicated to family portraits and home movies that reflect the fashion trends of the day. Other work in the show includes clothes by 20th-century designers who bridged cultures to put contemporary African fashion on the map but whose names have remained largely unknown outside the continent.
One of them is Shade Thomas-Fahm, often described as Nigeria’s first modern designer.
A former nurse in 1950s London, she created cosmopolitan reinterpretations of fabrics and shapes that were worn by the great and good of Lagos in the 1970s. On display is a raspberry red dress and hat in synthetic velvet with fluted Lurex sleeves. Chris Seydou, another designer in the show, made a name for himself in the 1980s by using African textiles like bògòlanfini, a handmade Malian cotton fabric traditionally dyed with fermented mud, for tailored Western trends like bell-bottoms, motorcycle jackets and miniskirts.
A mezzanine gallery hosts a collection of work by a new generation of African designers. The garments are shown on specially created mannequins with various Black skin tones, hair styles that include Bantu knots and box braids and a face inspired by Adhel Bol, a South Sudanese model.
All of the designers, who were selected by museum curators, external experts and a group of young people from the African diaspora, were involved in the display process, the museum said.
“Now more than ever, African designers are taking charge of their own narrative and telling people authentic stories, not the imagined utopias,” said Thebe Magugu, who is from South Africa and won the prestigious LVMH Prize in 2019. An elegant belted safari jacket ensemble from his 2021 Alchemy collection, which explored the changing face of African spirituality, features a print of the divination tools of a traditional healer, including coins, goat knuckles and a police whistle.
“I feel like there’s so many facets of what we’ve been through as a continent that people don’t actually understand,” Mr. Magugu said.
A desire to use fashion as a medium for enacting change is what unites many designers and photographers from across Africa, who are rethinking what a more equitable fashion industry could look like. Consider the questioning of binary identities by Amine Bendriouich, with his red linen djellaba crossed with a trench coat; the refashioning of gender norms by Nao Serati, who used pink Lurex for unisex flares, a jacket and bucket hat; and the elegant sculptural minimalism of pieces by brands like Moshions and Lukhanyo Mdingi that employ longstanding material traditions while subverting the stereotype that African fashion must always be loud and patterned.
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