Landmark exhibition Africa fashion makes its North American debut at the Brooklyn Museum

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Landmark exhibition Africa fashion makes its North American debut at the Brooklyn Museum
Photo by Lakin Ogunbanwo, image courtesy of Nataal.



BROOKLYN, NY.- Celebrating the outstanding creativity, ingenuity, and global impact of African fashions from the start of the independence era to today, Africa Fashion is the largest-ever presentation of this subject in North America. Through works by iconic designers and artists from the mid-twentieth century to the present, the exhibition illuminates how fashion, alongside the visual arts and music, played a pivotal role in Africa’s cultural renaissance during its liberation years, and how those elements laid the foundation for today’s fashion revolution.

The exhibition, proudly sponsored by Bank of America, is organized by the V&A and has been adapted for the Brooklyn Museum by Ernestine White-Mifetu, Sills Foundation Curator of African Art, and Annissa Malvoisin, Bard Graduate Center / Brooklyn Museum Postdoctoral Fellow in the Arts of Africa. The Brooklyn presentation is supplemented by works from several of the Museum’s collections: Arts of Africa, Photography, Arts of the Islamic World, Contemporary Art, and Egyptian, Classical, and Ancient Near Eastern Art. Home to one of the country’s most dynamic African diasporic communities, Brooklyn provides the perfect setting to explore the richness and diversity of the continent’s many histories and cultures.

Organized thematically, the exhibition features immersive displays of garments, textiles, photographs, literature, sketches, music, film, and catwalk footage. More than forty designers and artists from twenty African countries are represented, many of whose works are on view for the first time in the United States. The presentation includes fashions by mid-twentieth-century designers as well as works by a new generation of designers, collectives, and fashion photographers working in Africa today.

Africa Fashion begins with the independence era, from the 1950s through the 1990s. This period inspired a dramatic political, social, and cultural shift throughout the continent. Pan-Africanism surged, instilling a unified sense of identity—with fashion and artistic expression at its heart. The Cultural Renaissance section explores this time of radical change through fashion, photography, books, and ephemera such as protest posters, vintage magazine covers, and iconic album cover art. In Politics and Poetics of Cloth, visitors can explore the ways in which the making and wearing of Indigenous cloth became a strategic political act. Textiles from the Museum’s Arts of Africa collection complement a display of wax prints, commemorative cloth, àdìrẹ, kente cloth, and bògòlanfini. The first generation of African designers to gain global attention is highlighted in the Vanguard section. Works by Kofi Ansah (Ghana), Naima Bennis (Morocco), Shade Thomas-Fahm (Nigeria), Chris Seydou (Mali), and Alphadi (Niger), dating from the mid to late twentieth century, are shown together for the first time in the United States alongside a dynamic installation of fashion photography from the period.

Capturing Change presents portraits that chronicle the independence years and document the growing sense of agency and pride in being both Black and African. As photography became more affordable, pictures taken in studios and domestic spaces proliferated. Studio portraits by artists such as Seydou Keïta (Mali) and Malick Sidibé (Mali), drawn from the Museum’s collection, as well as fashion photography by James Barnor (Ghana) and family photographs exemplify this expansion. Visitors are invited to directly engage with the material by sharing their own individual and family portraits that showcase styles from Africa’s independence years. Through these contributions of self-fashioning, the diasporic community will become an integral part of the presentation.




The section Cutting Edge showcases a new generation of fashion designers and creatives with examples of couture and ready-to-wear garments, and adornment. Organized around concepts such as “Afrotopia,” “Artisanal,” “Co-creation,” “Provocation,” “Minimalist,” and “Mixologist,” this section displays designs by dozens of contemporary artists and collectives whose trailblazing collections hark back to their rich and specific cultural heritage. For example, South Africa–based designer Thebe Magugu’s Alchemy collection, a collaboration with stylist and healer Noentla Khumalo, focuses on African spirituality and relationships with ancestors. Adebayo Oke-Lawal (Nigeria) and his label Orange Culture challenge traditional notions of masculinity by introducing fabrics and colors perceived as “feminine” to menswear. This discourse continues through the self-portraiture of Gouled Ahmed (Djibouti), a costume designer, stylist, and photographer. Ahmed’s sartorial work also rebels against traditional cultural gender norms, specifically challenging the lack of representation of nonbinary Black Muslims. Pieces of cowrie jewelry by Lafalaise Dion (Côte d’Ivoire) explore the shell’s legacy as a symbol of wealth, prosperity, and fertility, as well as a contemporary accessory of adornment. Morocco-based designer Maison ARTC’s piece A Dialogue between Cultures is embroidered with the hand of Fatima (hamsa), a symbol of good luck, and was made specially for Africa Fashion.

Through the Photographer’s Lens highlights the power of contemporary photography and film to foster creative communities, give a platform to underrepresented artists, and explore a new African identity. Collection works by Zanele Muholi (South Africa) and Omar Victor Diop (Senegal) are featured alongside pieces by other contemporary photographers, such as Stephen Tayo (Nigeria), Sarah Waiswa (Uganda), and Victoire Douniama (Republic of the Congo).

The exhibition concludes with Global Africa. By exploring how the digital world accelerated the expansion of Africa’s fashion industry and influence, this section calls attention to the worldwide impact of African creativity.

“This exhibition is an important presentation of African creativity that highlights not only fashion but also the dynamic diversity of talent coming from the continent,” says Ernestine White-Mifetu. “I am excited that the Brooklyn Museum will be able to host Africa Fashion, and I am elated that our New York visitors will have the opportunity to engage with the creative production of Africa in new ways.”

“Fashion is both multidimensional and a fabulous creative statement. Africa Fashion encapsulates this with beautifully vivid and interlocking perspectives. Music, art, cultural identity, and material culture are emphasized to create a rich sensorial experience,” says Annissa Malvoisin.

“Bank of America believes that investments in the arts matter. They help economies thrive and bring people of all backgrounds together,” said José Tavarez, president, Bank of America New York City. “That’s why we’re excited to collaborate with Brooklyn Museum – a longstanding bank partner for more than two decades – and support Africa Fashion, an exhibition that celebrates African culture, creativity and diversity of talent.”










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