BERLIN.- For the first time Berlins
Kunstgewerbemuseum (Museum of Decorative Arts) is dedicating an exhibition to the complex and versatile world of fashion design and hairstyling of African origin. Connecting Afro Futures. Fashion Hair Design opens the museum up to decolonial fashion discourses and at the same time takes a position in the current discussion about the direction of museums and their collections.
Reclaiming the narrative
Fashion is a system with rules of its own and is regarded as a pacemaker of social change. An innovative generation of designers of African origin is currently rethinking contemporary African fashion and hairstyling beyond the (neo)colonial patterns of thought and beauty norms. The continent and its diaspora are in the process of breaking up the still existing hegemony of the Western fashion system and establishing new design hubs throughout Africa.
The dynamic engagement of the protagonists in the various fields of creative work and the rapid spread on social media are creating new design practices, identities and visual codes that create and transport a new image of Africa. It is not only about aesthetic aspects, but rather about a cultural and political engagement with a decidedly decolonial self-image.
Contemporary visions
Several fashion designers from the two fashion hubs Dakar in West Africa and Kampala in East Africa as well as an artist from Benin were invited to present in the Kunstgewerbemuseum. The invited designers and artists received a carte blanche to transform their visions of African fashion and hair into an installation. The kick-off took place in November 2018 with a one-week workshop in Berlin. After two project stations in Dakar and Kampala, the project now returns to Berlins Kunstgewerbemuseum.
Fashion designer Lamula Anderson of Lamula Nassuna (London/UK, Kampala/Uganda) in her mixed media installation The Perfect Stereotype draws a line from historical womens bustle dresses, over stereotypical color assignments in fashion, to the Afro. The fashion label Bull Doff (Dakar/Senegal) developed a work based on its current collection 54Punk, which combines traditional craftsmanship and punk rock. The artist Meschac Gaba (Cotonou/Benin) shows wig sculptures made of braided artificial hair, inspired by Berlins architectural icons.
In her work Signs of the Now, fashion designer José Hendo (London/UK, Kampala/Uganda) uses the traditional Ugandan material barkcloth to address questions about sustainability. Multimedia artist Njola Impressions (Kampala/Uganda) works with recycled industrial waste. Her practice is community-oriented: with people, for people; not only for galleries and catwalks, but also for the streets. In her installation Shameless Afro Hair, Adama Paris (Dakar/Senegal), fashion designer and founder of Dakar Fashion Week and Black Fashion Week, questions beauty ideals and norms for hair and fashion in the African context.
The artist and curator Ken Aïcha Sy (Dakar/Senegal) of Wakh'Art presents the work Baadaye (Swahili for Future) a photographic and videographic survey of Afrofuturist visions for the African continent. Fashion label Tondo Clothing (Kampala/Uganda) brings its VOUAFF to Berlin visions of urban African future fashion. VOUAFF closes the gap between traditional African fashion and current trends in the urban scene. The exhibition is complemented by works of illustrator Diana Ejaita (Italy/Nigeria Berlin/Germany) as well as fashion and music videos and photographs of hair and fashion in an African context.
Connecting Afro Futures. Fashion Hair Design is curated by Claudia Banz (Kunstgewerbemuseum Staatliche Museen zu Berlin), Cornelia Lund (fluctuating images), and Beatrace Angut Oola (Fashion Africa Now).
Project partners: Goethe Institute Kampala, 32° East / Ugandan Arts Trust (Kampala), Wakh'Art (Dakar), fluctuating images (Berlin), and Fashion Africa Now (Hamburg).
The exhibition will be accompanied by a magalog, published at Kerber Verlag and designed by Leni Charles (Vienna/Austria) and Maximilian Mauracher (Berlin). In addition to extensive visual material and fashion sections, the magalog offers essays, statements and interviews by, among others, Claudia Banz, Sunny Dolat, Denenge Duyst-Akpem, Natasha A. Kelly, Cornelia Lund, Serubiri Moses, Mwangi Hutter, Simon Njami, Mazzi Odu, Beatrace Angut Oola, and Jacqueline Shaw on fashion and hair in an African context.