Image courtesy @M.A.Roock
The Africa Fashion exhibition at London's V&A museum showcases design from around the continent. Among the pieces featured is "The Trench," by Maison ARTC, the label set up by Marrakech-based designer Artsi Ifrah.
Kadara Enyeasi
Gender-fluid Nigerian clothing label Lagos Space Programme was founded by Adeju Thompson in 2018. Its clothes are inspired by African heritage design and queer culture, and often feature adire, a traditional Yoruba indigo dyeing technique, applied to contemporary pieces. Thompson calls this method "post adire."
Sarah Duncan
It's not just clothing that's on display at the exhibition. The striking cover art to the 1989 album "Beasts of No Nation" by Afrobeat star Fela Kuti was created by Nigerian artist Lemi Ghariokwu.
Gouled Ahmed
This self-portrait by Ethiopia-based designer and photographer Gouled Ahmed is part of his "Sartorialists" series. His work "challenges the lack of nuance in the depictions of non-binary Black Muslims," according to the V&A.
Eric Don-Arthur
These designs by Ghanaian Kofi Ansah show off his trademark indigo colors. The picture was taken in 1997 in Accra, Ghana. Ansah graduated from the Chelsea School of Art, in London, and returning to Ghana, he became one of the country's most celebrated designers.
Robert Fairer
These pieces were designed by Kofi Ansah for the 2014 wedding of renowned architect David Adjaye and Ashley Shaw-Scott Adjaye.
(c)Victoria and Albert Museum, L
Folashade "Shade" Thomas-Fahm is a pioneering figure in Nigerian fashion. A former president of the Fashion Designers Association of Nigeria, she received a lifetime achievement award at Arise Magazine's Fashion Week in Lagos in 2011.
Fabrice Malard
For two decades, Cameroonian designer Imane Ayissi has been turning traditional African fabrics into made-to-order womenswear worn by the likes of Zendaya, Angela Bassett and Aïssa Maïga.
Sunny Dolat
This necklace by Kenya-based jeweler Ami Doshi Shah is made of brass, sisal (a plant-based fiber) and borax salt.
Chelsea Lee
This piece by South African designer Lukhanyo Mdingi is made from mohair -- the hair of the Angora goat. "It's important that African designers and artists are celebrated in an exhibition such as this," Mdingi said.
London CNN  — 

There’s a distinct buzz around the Africa Fashion exhibition at London’s prestigious Victoria and Albert Museum.

The event, which opens on July 2 and stretches across two floors, is a fascinating mixture of fashion from the mid-20th Century to the present day, told through photography, film, magazines and mannequins.

It features the work of 45 designers from more than 20 countries, and has more than 250 objects on display, 70 of which are new acquisitions. Starting with the period when many African nations were declaring independence, the exhibition examines the role fashion played in the continent’s cultural renaissance.

More than 50 mannequins have been dressed in exquisite outfits showcasing Africa’s creative spirit. It is colourful and fun, but there is a purpose.

“I think for us fashion is a kind of catalyst through which we can give people a glimpse into the myriad histories and cultures on the continent,” said Christine Checinska, the lead curator. “That’s also what we hope people will take away – just the sheer thrill and relish of the potential of African creativity.”

“There’s a real sense of collective power, and a sense of pan-Africanism in spite of difference,” she added.

The exhibition features the work of some of the most important names in the development of African fashion, including Folashade “Shade” Thomas-Fahm, who is often described as Nigeria’s first modern designer.

Victoria and Albert Museum
A design by Folashade "Shade" Thomas-Fahm, from the 1970s.

After studying fashion in London in the 1950s, Thomas-Fahm returned to Nigeria and became known for using traditional textiles in her work. Her early forays into fashion came at the same time as independence movements sprung up across the continent.

“In the 50s and 60s there was a kind of confusion about our identity,” she told CNN last year. “Everything Western was being praised and nobody seemed to care about our own indigenously produced materials. I just never felt that way.”

An archive of achievement

It is, however, the work of new and groundbreaking designers that really catches the eye. Among the many contemporary designers featured at the exhibition is Nigerian Lisa Folawiyo, who created her own label 17 years ago. Speaking from Lagos, she said she was excited to have been asked to take part.

“We’ve seen that globally what we do has been well received and it’s worn all over the world and I do feel like it’s about time that people realize that African fashion is beyond (the continent). It’s just fashion for whoever, wherever.”

Chelsea Lee
These pieces by Lisa Folawiyo, on display at the exhibition, feature a mix of contrasting patterns and colors.

Her work is showcased on the first floor of the exhibition, near to pieces by multi-award winning South African designer Lukhanyo Mdingi. “It’s no secret that the V&A Museum is one of the most revered and respected museums in the entire world, and to be part of an exhibition that really looks at African designers is fantastic,” he said, from his Cape Town studio.

He added that the exhibition will provide a valuable record of achievements in African craft and storytelling.

“It’s important that African designers and artists are celebrated in an exhibition such as this, because long term, it’s a case of having archives where people are able to go back to and see, ‘this is what happened during this time.’”

Africa Fashion runs until April 16, 2023.