Brighton Museum & Art Gallery are delighted to present two new displays highlighting rich and evolving fashion and identity practices in Africa. These displays have been co-curated with researchers from the African diaspora who live in Sussex. They are part of the Object Journeys Fashioning Africa project in partnership with the British Museum.
On
display are post 1960’s textiles and garments collected as part of the Fashioning Africa project, historic
African textiles and beadwork from Brighton Museum’s collections and objects on
loan from the British Museum. Four films accompany the displays. These feature
in-depth interviews with the curators, footage of the production of aso-oke fabric and of some of the
displayed outfits in use.
The displays have
been co-curated by Edith Ojo, Tshepo Skwambane and world art collection staff,
and supported by the British Museum. Through the process of co-curation, Edith
and Tshepo have shared their cultural knowledge, expertise and experiences of growing
up in Africa, to provide new interpretations for the displays and to breathe
new life into historic African objects.
Edith Ojo with the Aso-Oke display (c) RPMAG |
Township Journeys, curated by Tshepo Skwambane, demonstrates the important role that fashion and identity played
for black South Africans living in townships. The display reflects Tshepo’s
childhood experiences growing up in a township during apartheid, and the rich
cultural mix of people he encountered there. He states “I want to challenge and dismantle
stereotypes about Africa and Africans. Apartheid enforced separate and defined
communities, but you can’t stop interaction between people and ideas.”
Fashioning Africa is a Heritage Lottery Fund Collecting Cultures
project. With the support of a collecting panel, Brighton Museum has been able
to acquire new objects that reflect post-1960 African fashion identities.
This
display is part of Object Journeys, a national programme run by the British
Museum and supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund. It supports community
partners to research and explore museum collections and create new displays in
response to this investigation.
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