Fashion from Africa Celebrated at the Portland Art Museum
Alchemy collection, Thebe Magugu, Johannesburg, South Africa, Autumn/Winter 2021. Photography: Tatenda Chidora.
Africa Fashion opened at the Portland Art Museum on November 18 after acclaimed runs at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum and the Brooklyn Museum. This first-of-its-kind exhibition, making its only West Coast stop at PAM, honors the irresistible creativity, ingenuity, and unstoppable global impact of contemporary African fashions. Garments and textiles dating from the mid-twentieth century to the present day, contextualized by a range of cultural touchstones such as Drum magazines, Fela Kuti and Miriam Makeba record albums, and studio photography from Sanlé Sory, celebrate the transformative and liberatory power of self-fashioning. The New Yorker’s art critic Hilton Als called Africa Fashion a “vital and necessary exhibition.”
The exuberance and cosmopolitan nature of the contemporary African fashion scene unfolds through more than 50 outfits designed by over 40 designers hailing from 21 countries, who are shifting the geography of the global fashion world. Elegant minimalist garments by Mmusomaxwell, Katush, and Moshions push back on stereotypes that African fashions are exclusively colorful and brightly patterned; knitwear by Maxhosa echoes traditional Xhosa beadwork patterns; shimmering silk and layers of raffia combine in a fuchsia pink couture outfit by Imane Ayissi; and striking ensembles by Selly Raby Kane and Bull Doff reference Afrofuturism.
'Chasing Evil' collection, IAMISIGO, Kenya, Autumn/Winter 2020. Courtesy IAMISIGO. Photo: Maganga Mwagogo.
“Africa Fashion means the past, the future, and the present at the same time,” said fashion designer Artsi, founder of Moroccan design house Maison ArtC. “The joy of life and the joy of colour is completely different and very particular to the continent. It’s a language of heritage, it’s a language of DNA, it’s a language of memories.”
Africa Fashion employs a cross-cultural and cross-continental approach throughout the exhibition galleries, centering multiple and varied African voices and perspectives. Starting with the African independence and the liberation years that sparked a radical political and social reordering across the continent, the exhibition explores how fashion, alongside music and the visual arts, formed a key part of Africa’s cultural renaissance, laying the foundation for today’s fashion revolution. A section on textiles presents vintage woven kente cloth alongside printed kanga cloths and Dutch Wax cottons, showing how the making and wearing of traditional textiles in the moment of independence became a strategic political act.
“I feel like there’s so many facets of what we’ve been through as a continent that people don’t actually understand,” said South African designer Thebe Magugu. “Now more than ever, African designers are taking charge of their own narrative and telling people authentic stories, not the imagined utopias.”
Mbeuk Idourrou collection, Imane Ayissi, Paris, France, Autumn/Winter 2019. Photo: Fabrice Malard. Courtesy of Imane Ayissi.
The sophisticated fashions at the heart of Africa Fashion simultaneously celebrate long-held traditions of cultural self-expression through clothing and the significant contributions of contemporary designers of African descent to the international fashion scene.
Portland’s creative community also takes a turn on the catwalk for this presentation of Africa Fashion. Togo-born designer Komi Jean Pierre Nugloze of N’Kossi Couture will be included in the exhibition, showcasing two of his contemporary designs.
PROGRAMS
TOMORROW THEATER
January 11 -14, 2024
In conjunction with Africa Fashion, PAM CUT’s newly opened Tomorrow Theater on Portland’s East side will host living legend and Academy Award–winning costume designer Ruth E. Carter as part of Carte Blanche, PAM CUT’s quarterly series giving polymath artists free rein to do what they want to do and share something new. Carter’s Carte Blanche weekend features her in a rare talk on January 12 moderated by Amy Dotson, Director of PAM CUT and the Portland Art Museum’s Curator of Film & New Media. Carter will reflect on her career as an artist, her influences from Afrofuturism, and more.
The Carte Blanche weekend also includes screenings of Black Panther 1 and 2, as well as other influential films and media that inspired her career. Tickets and more details coming soon to tomorrowtheater.org.
VISIT
Tickets: $0 - $25
Free for kids age 17 and under
