Textiles

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

narrow strip woven mans cloth, brown, orange green,‘python skin’ design
This men's narrow strip woven kente cloth was made by Ewe weaver John Kwasi Dometi in 1980. This type of Read more
narrow strip woven man’s kente cloth multicoloured design with motifs including Sanfoka birds, tortoises and people with geckos along the borders.
This men's narrow strip woven rayon kente cloth, made by twins Fred and Richmond Akpo, is an Adanouvor or design Read more
Woven textile featuring squares of black, white, yellow, red and green formed into a repeating diamond design.
This is a narrow strip woven rayon kente cloth. This type of cloth is known as 'Titriku' or thick cloth, Read more

Textiles form an important part of the new Fashioning Africa collection. There is a long rich history of weaving, printing, dying, embellishing and repurposing textiles throughout the African continent and the new collection showcases diverse styles, techniques and practices as seen in post-1960s textiles produced in African countries and the UK African diaspora.

Collected examples include textiles that are culturally-specific, such as the ‘Neck of elep with a line’ design shirt from the Jóola community in Senegal, textiles produced and worn over a broad geographic area like shweshwe (German cloth) from southern Africa and aso-oke cloth from Nigeria, and textiles that have become global signifiers of a pan-African identity, such as wax print and dashiki.

Some of the collected textiles are cloths made to be worn as a wrap or pair of wrappers, or to be used as accessories, for example kangas from East Africa, Basotho blankets from southern Africa, and kente cloths from Ghana. Others are examples of material that would be used to make tailored garments, or pieces of material, for example strips of fabric that would be sewn together to make up a cloth. Examples include both handwoven and mass-produced pieces.

detail of orange and gold aso-oke fabric embellished with sequins and gems

Details of aso-oke outfit (Museum Accession Number R6091)

The collected textiles demonstrate the evolution of textile design and manufacture over time, according to everchanging tastes, identities and fashions. Examples include classic styles and techniques, as well as innovative contemporary pieces. These demonstrate some of the ways in which textile production and taste have developed as well as the impact of new technologies. A 2018 example of an aso-oke textile demonstrates this: it is made using a design and technique which are over 120 years old, but also features a contemporary silhouette and layers of embellishments applied using new technology.

Given the extraordinary range and diversity of textiles produced in African countries, the examples collected by Brighton Museum can only provide a limited insight into post-1960 textile production and consumption. Nevertheless, given the relative absence of textiles of 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 textiles in African countries in the post-independence era.

Object photographs courtesy of John Reynolds

R6079 Textile; Kente

narrow strip woven mans cloth, brown, orange green,‘python skin’ design

Kente (Museum Accession Number R6079)

This men’s narrow strip woven kente cloth was made by Ewe weaver John Kwasi Dometi in 1980. This type of cloth is called ‘Worgbale’, or python skin. The cloth was owned by Jonathan ‘Old Man Young Boy’ Akakpo, and was created for him by the weaver who was father to Esther Dometi, Jonathan’s late wife. The cloth was purchased from Jonathan on a visit to his home in Kpetoe, to interview Jonathan and his son Sylanvus about their lives and the significance of kente in their community. Collected in Ghana as part of the Fashioning Africa project.

Creator: John Kwasi Dometi

Place: Kpetoe, Agotime, Ghana, West Africa, Africa

Date: 1980

an older man wearing a kente standing in a garden

Jonathan ‘Old Man Young Boy’ Akakpo wearing the kente cloth woven for him by John Kwasi Dometi, his late Father-in-Law and acquired for the collection. Agotime Kpetoe, August 2017.

R6080/1 Textile; Kente

narrow strip woven man’s kente cloth multicoloured design with motifs including Sanfoka birds, tortoises and people with geckos along the borders.

Kente (Museum Accession Number R6080/1)

This men’s narrow strip woven rayon kente cloth, made by twins Fred and Richmond Akpo, is an Adanouvor or design cloth. It features motifs such as sankofa (bird looking back), tortoises, people, and geckos. This is a copy of the Akpos’ cloth that won them the 2016 Agotime Kpetoe Kente Festival weaving and design competition. Although still in their twenties the twins have set up their own weaving workshop. This allows them to support their family and pass on their skills to other young men and boys, and to develop their business by focusing on designing new award-winning cloths. Interviewed by the museum team while visiting their workshop in Ghana, the twins said ‘We just would like you to tell people that we are here, and tell them about our kente cloths’. Collected as part of the Fashioning Africa project.

Creator: Fred Akpo & Richmond Akpo

Place: Agotime Kpetoe, Adaklu-Anyigbe district, Volta region, Ghana, Africa

Date: 2017

R6080/2 Titriku Kente

Woven textile featuring squares of black, white, yellow, red and green formed into a repeating diamond design.

Kente (Museum Accession Number R6080/2)

This is a narrow strip woven rayon kente cloth. This type of cloth is known as ‘Titriku’ or thick cloth, and always features a square block design. It is a very popular cloth design that has been woven in the Agotime region since at least the early 20th century. This example was woven at a workshop run by twins Fred and Richmond Akpo. The twins were taught to weave by their uncle when they were 14. When they left school they began to weave full-time and started their own weaving workshop. They employ young men, and also train boys to weave after school and pay their school fees in return for their labour. When asked why they train the boys, they replied ‘So they too will have a skill to make a living from’. Commissioned by Brighton Museum as part of the Fashioning Africa Project.

Creator: Fred Akpo & Richmond Akpo

Place: Agotime Kpetoe, Adaklu-Anyigbe district, Volta region, Ghana, Africa

Date: 2017

Nene Nuer Keteku III, Paramount Chief of Agotime, dressed in a titriku kente cloth and chiefly adornments on his throne or seat of office, at his home in Agotime Kpetoe, 2017.

Nene Keteku is the Paramount chief of the Agotime Kpetoe, where the twins are based. During our trip we managed to get an audience with Nene Keteku, he showed us some of his special kente cloths which he wears as his Chiefly attire on official occasions, (including a Titriku) and he also explained the significance of these kente cloths made and worn in his community.