Garments

Explore Brighton Museum’s fashion collections acquired by the Fashioning Africa project.

Woman's maxi dress and matching jacket, made from blue and red adire stencilled fabric.
This fitted dress and jacket was made for the donor, Fashioning Africa collecting panel member Lou Taylor, by British dressmaker Read more
White T shirt with a map of Africa with South Africa highlighted in yellow and the slogan 'A New Country'
This T shirt is one of many designs produced for the South African presidential elections in 1994, the country's first Read more
brown camouflage print leather jacket
This leather outfit was part of Clive Rundle's collection entitled AFRIDESIA, originally presented at the New York Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Read more

Garments form the largest part of the new Fashioning Africa collection. Single items and complete outfits from the African continent, and from UK-based African diaspora communities, demonstrate changing techniques, styles and stories in the post-independence period. Acquired garments and accessories include those put together by fashion designers, and others compiled by individuals creating their own distinct ‘look’ and style story.

Acquired garments include handmade shirts and trousers tailored from narrow strip-woven textiles such as kente and aso-oke, as well as from indigo-dyed cloths such as adire. Also collected is a northern Nigerian man’s robe that demonstrates the indigo burnishing technique which gives a shining metallic finish. Other acquisitions include a large collection of mass-produced T-shirts with political slogans from eastern and southern Africa.

Manufacturers are represented by individual items, as well as a range of shweshwe garments and sample books produced by Da Gama Textiles, South Africa, and a promotional range of clothing for men and women from ABC printed textiles which were made in Manchester, UK, and intended for an African and international market.

Garments by South Africa-based Clive Rundle, with his structural and intricate approach to womenswear, and Nigeria-based Nike Davies-Okundaye, who makes innovative indigo process womenswear, reflect the practice of well-established designers working on the African continent. Next generation London-based designers are represented through examples of flamboyant, highly patterned menswear by Samson Soboye, and luxury bridal wear by formal womenswear designer Yemi Osunkoya, whose label Kosibah is hugely popular with West African diaspora clients.

The Fashioning Africa Collecting Panel felt it was important to capture personal style stories and the museum collected outfits and capsule wardrobes from individuals that reflected their identity and taste. Ephemera collected to accompany and provide a context for the garments includes photographs, wedding videos, oral histories, written testimonies, poetry, personal effects and even an album cover. These have enabled individuals to communicate their unique style stories.

Personal style stories are communicated through many of the outfits, for example a skirt suit tailored from Woodin fabric from Ghana. This garment is accompanied by a photograph of the owner Akila Richards, wearing the outfit on stage in 1985 in the UK, where she lives and works as a writer and performer. Akila also created a poem and piece of written testimony highlighting the cultural and personal significance of her African print suit. The museum also acquired a capsule wardrobe representing designers, trends and techniques prevalent in Ivory Coast and Senegal during the late 20th century, collected by LA resident Saundra Lang whilst undertaking extensive travel and fashion research in West Africa across three decades. The collection of outfits and accessories is accompanied by photographs of Lang wearing the outfits, and reflects her unique style and identity.

Given the extraordinary range and diversity of garments produced in African countries, the examples collected by Brighton Museum can only provide a limited insight into post-1960 clothing production and consumption. Nevertheless, given the relative absence of garments from this period in museum collections, we hope that these might provide useful starting points for considering how wider social, political, cultural and economic changes have been reflected in the making and wearing of garments in African countries in the post-independence era.

Object photographs courtesy of John Reynolds

R6087/3/1 Dress; R6087/3/2 Jacket

Woman's maxi dress and matching jacket, made from blue and red adire stencilled fabric.

Dress and Jacket (Museum Accession Number R6087/3/1 and R6087/3/2)

This fitted dress and jacket was made for the donor, Fashioning Africa collecting panel member Lou Taylor, by British dressmaker Bill Pashley in 1975. The fabric was made by Alakiti Studio in Lagos, Nigeria, and bought by the donor’s father, Lord Elwyn Jones. Taylor wore the outfit to accompany her father to a diplomatic event. The pattern is a contemporary version of Nigerian adire fabric.Adire refers to an indigo cloth that is produced by the Yoruba women of southwestern Nigeria through a variety of resist-dye techniques. Collected as part of the Fashioning Africa Project.

Creator: Alakiti Studio (fabric); Bill Pashley (tailoring)

Place: United Kingdom, Europe

Date: 1975

Blue and red adire print long sleeveless fitted dress

Dress tailored from adire fabric by Bill Pashley (Museum Accession Number R6087/3/1)

R6088/1 T shirt

White T shirt with a map of Africa with South Africa highlighted in yellow and the slogan 'A New Country'

T shirt (Museum Accession Number R6088)

This T shirt is one of many designs produced for the South African presidential elections in 1994, the country’s first fully representative democratic election. It was worn in support of the African National Congress (ANC) party and their candidate Nelson Mandela, who became South Africa’s first black head of state. This form of ‘protest’ or ‘struggle’ T shirt became popular in South Africa during the anti-apartheid movement. This T shirt was collected because the owner recognised that it represented an important historic moment. Collected as part of the Fashioning Africa project.

Place: South Africa, Southern Africa, Africa

Date: 1994

R6090 Leather Suit

A mannequin wearing a brown leather camouflage print bomber jacket and matching trousers, with a pale green frilly blouse

Outift by Clive Rundle (Museum Accession Number R6090/1-3)

This leather outfit was part of Clive Rundle’s collection entitled AFRIDESIA, originally presented at the New York Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in 2003. Each piece is a complex construction involving intricate processes. While his work has a sculptural quality, Rundle says it is the discipline of making garments to be worn on the body that motivates him. Collected as part of the Fashioning Africa project.

Creator: Clive Rundle

Place: South Africa, Southern Africa, Africa

Date: 2003

This outfit was featured in a post on Brighton Museum’s blog