BRIGHTON.- The first major UK exhibition dedicated to contemporary African fashion is currently on view at
Brighton Museum & Art Gallery.
Exploring fashion and style in four cities at the compass points of the African continent Casablanca in Morocco, Lagos in Nigeria, Nairobi in Kenya and Johannesburg in South Africa Fashion Cities Africa considers recent and contemporary fashion practices in these distinctive metropoles, from couture to street style.
The exhibition focuses on the style choices of individual fashion agents from each city; from designers and stylists to photographers and bloggers. Helen Mears, the Museums Keeper of World Art, Martin Pel, its Curator of Fashion & Textiles, Africa fashion specialists Hannah Azieb Pool and Helen Jennings and researcher Harriet Hughes visited the cities in summer 2015 to explore their fashion scenes and identify key players.
Helen Mears says: Theres been a surge of interest in contemporary African art and design in Europe and the US in recent years, but this is the first major UK exhibition dedicated to contemporary African fashion. We want to reveal the diversity that exists across the continent and within single cities and show that wax print is only part of the story of African fashion.
Each of the cities featured has its own fashion scene: in some cases emergent, in others more established. Some African designers are now major players in international fashion, while others are experimenting creatively in the interface between global fashion and local identities.
The exhibition aims to provide a snapshot of fashion practices in four specific cities and an introduction to some of the stories behind the style, whether its the widespread practice of tailoring or the impact of the huge market for second-hand European clothes.
The exhibition occupies three large galleries and includes diverse apparel from couture to street style, alongside images, film, sound and even elements of a tailors workshop evoking the drama, creativity and dynamism of the distinctive cities. Highlights include:
New commissions, including by Nairobi-based brother and sister duo 2ManySiblings
Controversial high-fashion outfits worn by one of Kenyas hottest bands, Sauti Sol (MTV Europes Best African Act 2014)
Garments and accessories associated with The Sartists, a Johannesburg-based creative collective documenting their lives and style in post-apartheid South Africa
Exquisite hand-crafted caftan couture pieces by Casablanca-based designer Zhor Raïs
Apparel by Maki Oh, the internationally acclaimed Lagos-based label worn by figures including Michele Obama