Wednesday, June 20, 2012

We Face Forward, Arts from West Africa today.

We Face Forward - Art from West Africa today. 2 June - 16 September 2012 

About

About

Forget everything you think you know about African art...

And embrace all that you don’t yet know about the art, culture and creativity of West African artists today. Major new sculptural installations, painting, drawing, photography, textiles, video, sound and fashion ask us to consider global questions of trade and commerce, cultural influence, environmental destruction and identity. Challenging and humorous, curious, noisy, elegiac and eclectic – this is the dynamism of West African cultures today. These form a huge, city-wide exhibition, spreading across Manchester Art Gallery, Whitworth Art Gallery and the Gallery of Costume (Platt Hall).
Over the Olympic summer, we are celebrating the global and the local, exploring the links between Manchester and West Africa as part of the London 2012 cultural festival.
There are more We Face Forward exhibitions and events at The Manchester Museum and the National Football Museum and a packed programme of We Face Forward family activities at various venues.
And We Face Forward reaches far beyond Manchester’s gallery spaces. The music programme, curated by Band On The Wall and The Manchester Museum, includes world renowned acts such as Afro-Cubism, Femi Kuti, Angelique Kidjo, Diabel Cissohko and Kanda Bongo Man and reflects the incredible diversity and brilliance of musical styles from West Africa.

Artists

Georges Adéagbo (Benin), El Anatsui (Ghana/Nigeria), Hélène Amazou (Togo / Belgium), Lucy Azubuike (Nigeria), Mohamed Camara (Mali / France), Cheick Diallo (Mali / France), Aida Duplessis (Mali), Em’kal Eyongakpa (Cameroon), Aboubakar Fofana (Mali / France), Meschac Gaba (Benin/ Netherlands), Francois-Xavier Gbré ( Ivory Coast / France), Romuald Hazoumè (Benin), Abdoulaye Armin Kane (Senegal), Abdoulaye Konaté (Mali), Soungalo Malé (Mali), Hamidou Maiga (Burkina Faso), Nii Obodai (Ghana), Emeka Ogboh (Nigeria), Abraham Oghobase, Amarachi Okafor (Nigeria / UK), Charles Okereke (Nigeria), Nnenna Okore (Nigeria / USA), Duro Olowu (Nigeria / London), George Osodi (Nigeria / London), Nyaba Leon Ouedraogo (Burkina Faso), Ibrahima Niang AKA Piniang (Senegal), Nyani Quarmyne (Ghana), Abderramane Sakaly (Senegal / Mali), Amadou Sanogo (Mali), Malick Sidibé (Mali), Pascale Marthine Tayou (Cameroon / Belgium), Barthélémy Toguo (Cameroon / France), Victoria Udondian (Nigeria), Séraphin Zounyekpe (Benin)

Musicians

AfroCubism – featuring Eliades Ochoa of Buena Vista Social Club and Toumani Diabaté (Cuba / Mali), Diabel Cissokho (Senegal), Angelique Kidjo with Manchester World Voices Choir (Benin / UK) ; Dele Sosimi Afrobeat Orchestra (Nigeria / UK); Endless Journey – featuring members of Mamane Barka and Etran Finatawa (Niger); Kanda Bongo Man (Congo / UK); Jaliba Kuyateh & The Kumareh Band (Gambia); Seckou Keita Band (Senegal / UK)

During this exhibition, I was invited by the whitworth arts gallery, Manchester for a five weeks residency to create new work for the show. The residency was supported by Islington mill where I lived and work between 22nd of April - 1st June when the exhibition opened.

Before studying painting, Victoria Udondian trained as a tailor and fashion designer. Her work today is informed by her interest in textiles, in the capacity of clothing to shape identity and the histories and tacit meanings woven into everyday materials. In 2010, Udondian travelled to Dakar, Accra and Bamako researching the impact second-hand clothing has had on the West-African textiles industry, and on cultural identity. Interested in confronting notions of ‘authenticity’ and ‘cultural contamination’, Udondian tests conceptions of West African textiles against present and past realities, convinced “…that there exists some consequences on the perception of one’s identity when the language of the fabrics one wears is changed fundamentally.”


This new textile work made for We Face Forward takes the Whitworth Art Gallery’s textile collection as its starting point. The collection ranges from textiles made in Manchester for export to the West African market in the eighteenth century, to fabrics by contemporary makers in Mali who supply DKNY with hand-spun cotton. Combining materials and narratives from Lagos and Manchester, Udondian weaves myths and histories into her own textiles, creating her own hybrids and questioning how stories become histories.


Victoria Udondian
Victoria Udondian, Aso Ikele (1948), 7m X 7m,2012
This peice is also a presentation of a possible history. find the history below....

History of Aso Ikele(1948)

About Aso Ikele (1948)

The name, Aso Ikele, meaning cloth used to protect the home in the Yoruba language, originates from the Yorubaland in Nigeria. Given the provisional date of 1948, parts of the textile may be much older and some sections much more recent, but presented only with the material itself, and the history of its probable homeland, we can only conjecture about its true origins and exact date.

The textile is divided into three panels, the left and right panels longer and more colourful, and the central panel almost exclusively woven with a white border. Each panel has a centrepiece from which each woven section appears to radiate. These central sections are certainly much older than the surrounding sections, and appear to be produced by a different hand to the outer parts. Of particular interest is the burlap centre-piece on the left-hand panel. This section is inscribed with text, which may possibly have some ritual significance. The fabric has been repaired several times, implying a regular use, but for purposes unknown.

As Venice Lamb and Judy Holmes have attested in African Weaving (Duckworth 1975), ‘Nigeria has a tradition of weaving and dyeing of textiles which was of international importance long before the first European reached the shores of West Africa in the fifteen century’. The techniques and patterns of Aso Ikele are undoubtedly drawn from this rich history, but its sections imply a long period of making and remaking, utilising sections of older fabric.

Possibly the first European to see the early sections of Aso Ikele might have been the German archaeologist and anthropologist, Leo Frobenius, who visited Ife in Nigeria in 1910. Although only in the region for barely three weeks, Frobenius’ study was the accepted and only written view of Ife for some 50 years. His expedition’s primary purpose was to enrich the collections of German museums, and an account written in 1959 described Frobenius as ‘merely extract[ing] possessions by a combination of browbeating and exploitation…’ Frobenius was also the inventor of a spurious myth, proposing that a lost European civilization was the root of African culture and social structure.

One possible route by which Aso Ikele may have come to Manchester is with Frank Willett, who was Keeper of the Department of Ethnology and General Archaeology, at the Manchester Museum from 1950 to 1958. The majority of the Nigerian textiles in the Whitworth Art Gallery come from Willett, who made his first visit to Nigeria in 1956. If the textile was brought to the UK by Willett, no documents exist and it is unclear if the outer sections would have been in place then.

Careful analysis of these outer sections reveals buttons and labels, demonstrating that the outer section is in fact entirely made of clothes.





Saturday, April 28, 2012

We Face Forward: Art from West Africa TodayManchester celebrates London 2012 Festival2 June to 16 September 2012

We Face Forward: Art from West Africa TodayManchester celebrates London 2012 Festival2 June to 16 September 2012
                    
City-wide exhibition of leading contemporary artists from West Africa ·       
 Major new installations commissioned for galleries and parks·        
Concerts with many world-renowned musicians, including AfroCubism·       
 Further exhibitions of fashion, photography, football and storytelling ·        
African art bus to tour creative activities around Greater Manchester
We Face Forward is a season of contemporary art and music from West Africa, celebrated across Manchester’s galleries, museums, music venues and public spaces, from 2 June to 16 September as part of London 2012 Festival.   The exhibitions, concerts, events and community activities recognise both the historic and contemporary links between Manchester and the various countries that make up West Africa. They will explore ideas of economic and cultural exchange, environment and sustainability, and the place of tradition in contemporary culture. The core of the season is a city-wide exhibition of contemporary art from the region, the first major collaboration between Manchester Art Gallery, Whitworth Art Gallery and Gallery of Costume, Platt Hall. It will feature painting, photography, textiles, sculpture, video and sound work from a wide range of internationally acclaimed artists, including Georges Adéagbo, El Anatsui, Romuald Hazoumè and George Osodi. The exhibition will also be the first major display in the UK of work by emerging artists such as Lucy Azubuike, Emeka Ogboh, Charles Okereke, Nyani Quarmyne and Victoria Udondian.  New, large-scale installations have been commissioned from Barthélémy Toguo at Manchester Art Gallery, and from Pascale Marthine Tayou at Whitworth Art Gallery. The Gallery of Costume will show work by three esteemed Malian photographers, Malick Sidibé, Abderramane Sakaly and Soungalo Malé, whose archives are being preserved by the National Museum of Mali. Their extraordinary studio and social portraits will be shown alongside West African dress from the gallery collection, photographs by Hamidou Maiga and contemporary fashion pieces from British-Nigerian designer  Duro Oluwu. A music programme, curated by Band on the Wall and The Manchester Museum, will feature world-renowned acts including: AfroCubism (the new international supergroup formed by Eliades Ochoa of Buena Vista Social Club and Toumani Diabaté); a multi-media concert by Niger supergroup The Endless Journey (Mamane Barka and Etran Finatawa); Angelique Kidjo; Jaliba Kuyateh; Kanda Bongo Man and many more to be confirmed. Taking place in music venues and galleries across the city, the season will open with AfroCubism at Bridgewater Hall on Sunday 3 June. Exhibitions and events will also take place at The Manchester Museum and the National Football Museum. The city is hosting nine football matches during the 2012 Olympics and the National Football Museum will present African artists for whom football gives a means to explore protest, politics and social engagement.  The Manchester Museum is working with the African Caribbean Carers Group to present a re-interpretation of the Anansi spider stories using the Museum’s natural history and anthropology collections. The programme will be launched with Big Saturday: Manchester Anansi Spider on Saturday 2 June where the story will be performed by the Men’s Room community group, working in partnership with the Royal Exchange Theatre Company. A summer-long creative programme will engage with a range of people right across Greater Manchester. Modelled on the highly decorated taxi-buses that ferry people across Dakar, Accra and Bamako, an art bus will take creative activities out beyond the participating galleries and parks to other locations across the city.  To draw the different locations together, artist Meschac Gaba has been commissioned to design an artwork which incorporates the flags of all the West African nations. This colourful motif will be on display at participating galleries and venues.  The title for the season is taken from a speech by Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah, made in 1960. Stating his resistance to Cold War super powers, Nkrumah’s full quote is “We face neither East nor West: we face forward.” The festival takes its direction from Nkrumah’s statement of independence, deriving inspiration from his sense of West African cultural dynamism. Dr Maria Balshaw, Director of Whitworth Art Gallery and Manchester City Galleries, said: “Manchester's connections to West Africa are part of its industrial and trading history.  This exhibition brings the dynamism of West African art today to Manchester, as the world comes to the UK for the Olympics.”
Ruth Mackenzie, Director, London 2012 Festival, said: “I am particularly delighted that this exceptional exhibition of art from West Africa will be part of the London 2012 Festival programme bringing once in a lifetime opportunities to experience culture to people across the north west.” http://www.wefaceforward.org/
ENDS For more information, images or interviews with artists please contact Chris Baker or Laura Norton at Colman Getty Consultancy 020 7631 2666 / chris@colmangetty.co.uk / laura@colmangetty.co.uk Notes to Editors About We Face Forward We Face Forward has been developed with the support of a number of individuals and institutions who work in West Africa, hold collections of work or represent artists.  Partnerships have been developed with Martin Barlow (Curator, Photo Bienniale du Bamako), Christine Eyene (independent curator), Lubaina Himid (artist), Koyo Kouoh (Director, Raw Material Company, Dakar), October Gallery (London), Robert Devereux (collector), Alan Rice (University of Central Lancashire) and Samuel Sidibé (Director, Musée du Mali). Consultation has also been provided by Bisi Silva (Director, Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos).   Confirmed artists include:Georges Adéagbo, Hélène Amazou, Lucy Azubuike, Mohamed Camara , Aboubakar Fofana, Meschac Gaba, Francois-Xavier Gbré, Romuald Hazoumè, Armin Kane, Abdoulaye Konaté, Soungalo Malé, Hamidou Maiga, Nii Obodai, Emeka Ogboh, Abraham Oghobase, Amarachi Okafor, Charles Okereke, Nnenna Okore, Duro Olowu, George Osodi, Nyaba Leon Ouedraogo, Piniang, Nyani Quarmyne, Abderramane Sakaly, Amadou Sanogo, Malick Sidibé, Pascale Marthine Tayou, Barthélémy Toguo, Victoria Udondian Confirmed musicians include: AfroCubism (featuring Eliades Ochoa of Buena Vista Social Club and Toumani Diabaté), Angelique Kidjo with Manchester World Voices Choir, Dele Sosimi Afrobeat Orchestra, Endless Journey (featuring members of Mamane Barka and Etran Finatawa), Kanda Bongo Man, Jaliba Kuyateh & The Kumareh Band, Seckou Keita Band Images of and interviews with all artists are available on request. We Face Forward is supported by Manchester Art Gallery Trust and the Zochonis Charitable Trust. An exhibition catalogue will be available with colour images by all the artists and contextual essays. http://www.wefaceforward.org/
About the Cultural Olympiad and London 2012 FestivalThe London 2012 Cultural Olympiad is the largest cultural celebration in the history of the modern Olympic and Paralympic Movements. Spread over four years, it is designed to give everyone in the UK a chance to be part of London 2012 and inspire creativity across all forms of culture, especially among young people.
The culmination of the Cultural Olympiad will be the London 2012 Festival, a spectacular 12-week nationwide celebration bringing together leading artists from across the world with the very best from the UK, from Midsummers Day on 21 June and running until the final day of the Paralympic Games on 9 September 2012.The London 2012 Festival will celebrate the huge range, quality and accessibility of the UK's world-class culture including dance, music, theatre, the visual arts, fashion, film and digital innovation, giving the opportunity for people across the UK to celebrate the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
Principal funders of the Cultural Olympiad and London 2012 Festival are Arts Council England, Legacy Trust UK and the Olympic Lottery Distributor. BP and BT are Premier Partners of the Cultural Olympiad and the London 2012 Festival. www.london2012.com/festival  About Arts Council England  Arts Council England champions, develops and invests in artistic and cultural experiences that enrich people’s lives. We support a range of activities across the arts, museums and libraries – from theatre to digital art, reading to dance, music to literature, and crafts to collections. Great art and culture inspires us, brings us together and teaches us about ourselves and the world around us. In short, it makes life better. Between 2011 and 2015, we will invest £1.4 billion of public money from government and an estimated £0.85 billion from the National Lottery to help create these experiences for as many people as possible across the country.  http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/  About Manchester City Galleries  Manchester City Galleries forms part of Manchester City Council’s Neighbourhoods Directorate and is responsible for delivering services on two public sites:  Manchester Art Gallery Gallery of Costume, Platt Hall   About Manchester Art Gallery  Manchester Art Gallery is a place people come to enjoy and learn about extraordinary art and we welcome more than 400,000 visitors each year. The gallery’s collection spans six hundred years and is celebrated for its 19th century British paintings, especially its major Pre-Raphaelite works.  New Director Dr Maria Balshaw is focusing on these rich historic collections and giving them contemporary resonance through an increasingly bold programme of exhibitions and displays.    Manchester Art Gallery, Mosley Street, Manchester M2 3JL Tel: 0161 235 8888 Textphone: 0161 235 8893 http://www.manchestergalleries.org/  Open Tuesday to Sunday and Bank Holiday Mondays, 10am – 5pm Closed Monday (except Bank Holidays) Free entry   About Gallery of Costume, Platt Hall  Gallery of Costume, based at Platt Hall in Rusholme, houses our Designated collections of clothing and fashion accessories, one of the largest collections in Britain. Following a major eighteen month refurbishment project it reopened in March 2010.  Gallery of Costume, Platt Hall, Rusholme, Manchester, M14 5LL Tel: 0161 245 7245 www.​manchestergalleries.​org Open Wednesday to Saturday 1.30pm - 4.30pm Free entry   About Whitworth Art Gallery  Whitworth Art Gallery is part of the University of Manchester. It is home to internationally renowned collections of modern art, textiles, watercolours, prints, drawings and sculpture. Created in 1908 as the first English gallery in a park, Whitworth is today developing a new vision for the role of a university gallery, and is forging stronger connections between park, community and landscape through its development and extension.  Whitworth Art Gallery, Oxford Road, Manchester, M15 6ERTel: 0161 275 7450www.manchester.ac.uk/whitworth  Open Monday to Saturday 10am - 5pm, Sunday 12 - 4pm. Free entry   About The Manchester Museum  The Manchester Museum is the UK’s largest university museum and all of its collections are designated by the government as being of national and international importance. As a university museum, The Manchester Museum uses its international collection of human and natural history for enjoyment and inspiration. Working with people from all backgrounds, the Museum provokes debate and reflection about the past, present and future of the earth and its inhabitants.   The Manchester Museum, The University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL. Tel: 0161 275 2634  www.manchester.ac.uk/museum  Open Tuesday to Saturday 10am - 5pm, Sunday, Monday and Bank holidays 11am - 4pmFree Entry   About Band on the Wall Band on the Wall has been one of the cornerstones of Manchester's thriving music scene for the greater part of the last century and exists to bring the best music from around the world to the stage. In addition to championing the finest world music, folk, blues and jazz, Band on The Wall was also at the centre of Manchester’s punk scene in the late 1970s where Buzzcocks, The Fall and Joy Division played some of their earliest concerts. It has a global reputation for showcasing a vast array of accomplished and respected artists and musical genres from around the world and is recognised as a venue that promotes equality and diversity through music. Band on the Wall hosts concerts both at its home venue in Manchester's Northern Quarter and at venues and festivals across the country. Since reopening in September 2009, Band on the Wall has been voted Manchester's Best Night Out by City Life (Manchester Tourism Awards, 2010) and Best Small Venue in the North West (NME Magazine, 2011) Band on the Wall is a registered charity run on a not-for-profit basis. It acknowledges the support of Arts Council England, Heritage Lottery Fund and Manchester City Council. Band on the Wall, 25 Swan Street, The Northern Quarter, Manchester, M4 5JZ Tel: 0161 834 1786www.bandonthewall.org  Box Office Opening Hours: Monday to Saturday 5pm - 9pm (later on concert evenings)Closed Sunday (except concert evenings)

Presently in Manchester on a residency to creat work for 'we face forward', Leading arts from West Africa today. outcome to be posted later....stay tuned!

RESIDENCY AT BAG FACTORY STUDIOS, FORDSBURG, JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA FROM JAN 19th- 6th APR 2012

RESIDENCY AT BAG FACTORY STUDIOS, FORDSBURG, JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA FROM JAN  19th- 6th APR 2012

S A S : An exhibition by visiting artists



The residency had five artist which included Victoria Udondian from Nigeria, Mark Thomann from Germany, Kate Tarratt Cross from Cape Town, Fiona Flynn from the UK, and Jarrett Erasmus, our 3rd David Koloane Award Winner from KraaiFontein. At 5:30 on the evening of Thursday 29 March the Bag Factory Artists Studios opened a one week-long exhibition of the work of this five visiting artists –
 These dynamic individuals have been part of the Bag Factory’s Visiting Artists Programme, and over the period of the past three months have been preparing work, networking and running workshops around Johannesburg. The show, entitled S A S (Secret Art Service) is the end result.

During this period, the major work I created was the Amufu fabric, other smaller pieces were 2D mixed media works which resulted from the amufu piece.

Amafu Fabric - 1878
Installation, mixed textiles, paper, fabric paint, thread,
Variable (about 548cm X 336cm X 270cm )
2012
Amafu Fabric installation showcases a large piece of ‘textile’ which is a testimony of a possible history, in which the textile patterns recognized and codified in the African fabric are revisited by being mixed and hybridized through the use of re purposed pieces of textiles and scrap sourced from tailors and garbage. The decision to create a fabric, inspired by techniques and workmanship of fabrics in the different African countries, prompted by the search for a creative response to the excessive standardization of contemporary fabrics and the historical and symbolic image associated with it.


About Amufu fabric
Amafu textile was such an important fabric because it was the first hand printed fabric in South Africa before European textile manufacturers developed a block and discharge printing style on indigo cotton fabric during the 18th - 19th centuries and much of this cloth entered the South African market.
Amafu fabric was first printed between the 17th - 18th century by Nomsa Buthelizi who was a traditional quilter and designer. Her important Amufu fabrics were typically used in South Africa for traditional ceremonies in rural areas, ensuring a constant demand for Amafu. In certain cases, special designs were produced for important occasions such as royal birthdays and national festivals, all designs being ©Nomsa Buthelizi.
Glenda Kirkiridis, daughter of Nomsa grew up with her mother learning this trade at her early ages, at some stage she left her mum and went to continue her education.Later on in life, Glenda Kirkiridis took into quilting, she was unable to find the colour range and matching hues to fit a quilt for a competition and in frustration, In the mid 1990’s decided to dye her own fabrics. This was a lot of hard work, but she got the result she needed when she implored her mother’s technique to create again Amafu fabric. A number of quilters then asked if she would dye certain colours for them. Glenda began expanding her repertoire and the rest is history.
Today this fabric has become fashionable beyond its traditional usage and praise must go to young South African designers for their renewed interest in this traditional national heritage.


The Magie Relph Collection is the result of the long-term commitment which documents the passionate and continued interest she had in Africa and its textile even till date.
Magie Relph Collection
Magie Relph’s passion for Africa and its textiles began decades ago while she was working and travelling across Africa as a cook for an overland safari company.
She has a large collection of textiles and quilts from Africa dating back to 18th century textiles till present day African prints. She said ‘When I first went to Africa, everywhere I went I found colourful, irresistible fabrics on display in the local markets. It wasn't long before I was collecting fabrics, country by country, as I crossed Africa. I even negotiated scraps from local tailors, much to their amusement. To keep myself busy on the road, I hand-pieced my first quilt using only African fabrics. I called it African Calliope and it was featured in Ontario Craft magazine in 1990.’
Of all of Maggie’s collection from Africa, the South African Amafu fabric which she collected from Durban is most significant. This was the earliest of Nomsa Buthelizi pieces hand dyed and hand screened in South African sunlight. It is also the largest piece Nomsa ever created dating back to 1878.
Even such a short biographical outline easily explains how Magie Relph’s is a name that should be recognized for preserving Africa’s history. Today, as she continues travelling in Africa, she is still learning and discovering new fabrics and African textile traditions. And it is again thanks to the foresight of Magie Relph that we can now see this masterpiece of historical Africans textile.






 
Ukara EKpe’ cloth 1
Mixed fabrics, fabric paint, acrylic on canvas, 89cm X 61cm
2012

Ukara EKpe’ cloth2
Mixed fabrics, fabric paint, acrylic on canvas, 76cm X 40cm
2012


Untitiled
Threads, acrylic on canvas, 74cm X40cm
2012


Untitled
Threads, acrylic on canvas, 76cm X 50cm
2012


It was a great experience working at bag factory studios.

 

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

. PROJECT: HABITUS


1.       PROJECT: HABITUS
2011
The Habitus project is organized around the theme of clothing with the aim of prompting a reflection on the consequences of the overproduction of goods and the reckless accumulation of clothing intended as consumer goods. Habitus specifically focuses on the dynamics that govern the used clothes market, which since the early 1970s has significantly contributed to the decline and the subsequent deep crisis of the local textiles industry in Nigeria.
The decision to create a collection of handmade clothes, inspired by techniques and workmanship of the fabrics in the different Venetian museums, as well as those of Nigeria,was prompted by the search for a creative response to the excessive standardization of contemporary clothing and the historical and symbolic image associated with it.
Second Hand Museum, an integral part of Habitus, is a museum installation showcasing five authentic testimonies of a possible history, in which the clothing patterns recognized and codified in the Venetian tradition are revisited by being mixed and hybridized through the use of repurposed and second hand materials. The ability to create an “authentic fiction” also returns in the series Venetian Portraits inspired by the distinctive Venetian caprice portraits and the nineteenth-century chromatic lagoon tradition. In these photographs, the “Venetian-ness” is dressed in unusual African-style clothes, and portrayed in poses that are at times haughty while at others nonchalant, letting us imagine an upside-down world of reverse colonization.
The used clothing was donated by the charity organization Ca’ Letizia, which has long been active in the collection and redistribution of used clothing to the needy. The precious damask fabrics were kindly donated by the Rubelli company. The jewels were kindly borrowed by Jacinthe Clotilde Kondje’s Galleria African Art JCK. We would also like to thank the following individuals for their participation and contribution: Fiora Gandolfi, Antony Knight, Margherita Minguzzi, Elena Ianeselli and Jacinthe Clotilde Kondje.

Second Hand Museum
Installation, clothing, mixed textiles and wood, variable dimensions
2011
The Shade Thomas-Fahm Collection is the result of the long-term commitment which documents the passionate and continued interest that painter Fabio de Marino (Trapani, 1852 - Venice, 1924) had in African clothing fashions between the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.

The building and its history
The Second Hand Museum was designed by Fabio de Marino as his own home and studio. It was built in 1913, at a time in history when the island of Giudecca saw major changes in its architectural and urban planning, with the construction of new large industrial plants like the Junghans factory and the imposing Stucky Mills, or extensive middle-class residential complexes as well as subsidized public housing projects.
The neo-gothic features of the palace represent only a starting point of a complex style that unfolds in curious combinations. Such is the case of the big three “eyes”, the three large pointed-arch windows on the main floor affording ample natural lighting to the studio that gave the building both its current name and its characteristic look.
The de Marinos made the Second Hand Museum their home during their frequent stays in Venice and the building where they decided to house the family’s art collection: from earthenware to the paintings of Adolfo and Fabio de Marino, and over two hundred garments in linen, cotton and silk from Angola, Nigeria, Kenya, Zambia and
South Africa.
In 1924, with the archives and part of its furniture, the Second Hand Museum was inherited by Fabio de Marino’s son Adolfo with the bequest provision that he should turn it into “an Art and Textile gallery complementing the Museum at Palazzo Mocenigo, where those clothing artifacts usually wrongly considered frivolous and ephemeral can find a home”. It was only in the 1970s, however, that the heirs revived and implement the family’s collecting legacy. The original bequest included some garments by the Nigerian fashion designer Shade Thomas-Fham, who had came into contact with the de Marias through world-famous architect Renzo Scarpa, befriended by the designer in London in 1969. In those portentous years, Shade Thomas-Fahm had begun to look into the consequences that the surge of exports into Africa of second hand luxury textiles, mainly manufactured by Harrods in London, were causing on the Nigerian textile market and tradition.
The Shade Thomas-Fham Collection
Shade Thomas-Fahm (Lagos, 1933) is one of the pioneers of twentieth century Nigerian fashion. A graduate of Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London in the early 1950s, the designer soon returned to her homeland where he founded Shade’s Boutique, the first haute couture and prêt-à-porter fashion house in Nigeria managed by a woman.
With her creations, Thomas-Fahm encoded a range of styles that today are still the cutting edge of local fashion, the so-called Lagos Style.
Her success is also due to her ability to interpret two complementary trends in post-colonial Africa. Alongside the need to update the styles of the traditional attire to a more modern taste, there is the ongoing necessity to use the fabrics produced by local industries, in contrast to the massive imports of finished textiles from the Old Continent. A famous example of this concurrence is the boubou, the female version of the typical Agbaba, the robe customarily worn by men and made from a single rectangular strip of cloth wrapped around the chest and, in the model designed by Thomas-Fahm, ending in a headdress that can be knotted as the wearer prefers. If this model is indeed a radical departure from traditional dress and gender codes and as such is comparable to the revolutionary introduction of women’s trousers in Europe in the 1920s, it is also true that the textiles employed are completely faithful to classic Nigerian tradition: aso-oke, ankara, okene, and akwete are just some of the fabrics most widely used in the vast body of designs created by this fashion maven.
Even such a short biographical outline easily explains how Shade Thomas- Fahm’s is a name that belongs not only in the hall of fame of fashion and costume, but should also be included in a broader context of entrepreneurship and innovation. Her business activities have in fact contributed to the development of a vital manufacturing industry, which in its most flourishing period numbered more than a hundred textile factories in the Nigerian region alone. In 1968, the manufacturing buzz created in her country of origin led Shade Thomas-Fahm to theorize what she herself calls “counter-colonial actions” - attempts to reverse the strategies and methods of colonialism against the same powers that applied them with impunity. Perhaps the most famous of these operations was the distribution on the European market of a collection of nineteenth-century-style dresses made of second-hand fabric scraps. It was at the London fashion show presenting these collections that architect Renzo Scarpa met the designer. The support provided by the architect was immediate and total: first by taking it upon himself to get Thomas-Fahm’s collection distributed by Harrods, thus securing a mass market for her creations, and then by introducing the designer into the intellectual circle that met regularly at the Second Hand Museum. And it is again thanks to the foresight of the Italian architect that we can now see these five masterpieces of world fashion.



Nigerian male attire
Traditional clothing, 2011
As in the case of the clothing worn by women, the buba, an open neck tunic, this time long enough to reach the thighs, covers the upper part of the body. The long flared sleeves remain unchanged. The baggy trousers called sokoto go from the waist to the ankles, while a round cap called fila is worn on the head. The combination of the three elements described form the traditional male attire, which as a whole takes the name of dashiki.






 White dress
  Evening gown, 1803
Bodice made from woollen baby undergarments. 1980s jacket buttons. Rubelli fabric. Jewel with scraps of fabric and leather from a bag.
The dress style that emerges during the First French Empire survives the empire itself and lasts for a few years after its fall. The fashionable silhouette in this period radically differs from the past, entirely abandoning all artificial modifications of the female body in favour of a loose and natural line. Stays, corsets and paniers become unpopular, and underwear is reduced to the bare minimum. The clinging, graceful dresses are clearly inspired by classical light tunics, with a long straight line, flaring out at the bottom, with a short train and a high waistline gathered under the breasts. The favourite colour is white, a clear homage to classical sculpture.


Nigerian female attire
Traditional dress, 2011
The main difference that is self-evident when European-style clothing is compared with its Nigerian counterpart is the custom to use seams very sparingly to support the fabric, utilizing instead special folds or knots. Wide strips of fabric cut in polygonal shapes are wrapped freely around the body, forming a soft composition that leaves room for adjustments in accordance with the taste and comfort of the wearer. The buba is a loose-neck blouse usually long enough to extend below the waist, often ending on the arms with long flared sleeves. Always tied on the sides or folded into variety of different ways, is the iro, a rectangular piece of cloth wrapped around the waist and covering the knees.




Red dress
Evening gown, 1840
Rubelli fabric. Knit sweater sleeves. Lace underwear fichu.  Necktie fan.
Starting from 1840, sleeves lose their fullness and became long and narrower. Skirts, now reaching all the way to the floor, are imposingly wide and round.
To make room for the full skirts, waistlines shift upward slightly. The boned bodice is tight-fitting, often ending in pagoda sleeves, bell-shaped from the elbow down and frequently worn over detachable false under sleeves in embroidered lawn called engage antes.





Green dress
Evening gown, 1867
Skirt, Rubelli fabric. Overskirt, fringed knit woollen poncho. Printed silk skirt. Bodice created by repurposing a house frock.
After the mammoth bustles of the mid-1860s, the size of the skirts begins to shrink. The fullness of the skirt is in many cases obtained by overlaying an overskirt draped up at the back and topped by an apron style tablier top layer half skirt, while the decorations are embellished with buttons, fringes, braids, ribbons and tassels.
These full skirts, even though much less cumbersome than the crinolines of the previous decade, are so loaded with frills and drapery that in many cases they require much more fabric than their predecessors.
Corsets adjust to the new skirt outline and become longer, as do the hairstyles in which now the hair is swept up and gathered in a chignon to accentuate the verticality of the whole.


Venetian Portraits
4 Photo series, inkjet print on d-bond, each
100x165 cm
Portrait of Margherita Minguzzi
 Portrait of Fiora Gandolfi
Portrait of Jacinthe Clotilde Kondje

 Portrait of Antony Knight





OKRIKA BALE
2011
Series of 5 sculptures
Second-hand clothes, ropes, variable dimensions
The sculptural series Okrika Bale is the result of a survey conducted in collaboration with the Association San Vincenzo Ca’ Letizia, the Mestre chapter of the St Vincent de Paul Society Charities, an international lay Catholic organization dedicated to assisting those in need through the invaluable contribution of a large group of volunteers. During the residency period, with their support, the artist has had the opportunity to study the process of collection and export of used clothing from Italy to the African continent.
Some of these used clothes have been integrated into the sculptures, which deliberately take the form of “okrika” bales, the typical form in which the packaged clothing arrives for sale on the Nigerian market. The sculptures show the paradox of a shipment, which begins with an act of charity, but, while in transit, often gives in to the dynamics of an uncontrollable monetary exchange.
 
ABOUT 1000
2011
Outdoor installation, variable dimensions
T-shirts, clips, rope
About 1000 is an installation that takes its theme from the way laundry is hung out to dry in the streets of Venice. The laundry lines are strung with a thousand red garments, T-shirts and other types of clothing, which act as a clear reference to the anniversary of the Unification of Italy. The red shirt, the protagonist of the birth of the Kingdom of Italy, was nothing but a sort of blouse, a work smock worn by workers and artisans. Historical sources indicate that the shirts were handmade using cheap fabric collected by volunteers from a consortium of Uruguayan butchers.
Rather than to the creation of a Kingdom, the installation is a clear tribute to all citizens who, after 150 years, still volunteer to try to address the problems not solved by the government and the market. Making a simple gesture, which consists in the accumulation and elevation of the red garments, the artist tries to establish a connection with Italian “historical reality”, made up of multiple scattered contents that can only be understood when we attempt to establish a relationship between our own history, our life’s experience, and the experience of the world surrounding us.