Nthabiseng Kekana’s Sankofa: How a Sangoma’s Practice Shapes Contemporary African Art

Nthabiseng Kekana's Sankofa: How a Sangoma's Practice Shapes Contemporary African Art Nthabiseng Kekana1

Nthabiseng Kekana’s Sankofa: How a Sangoma’s Practice Shapes Contemporary African Art Nthabisneg Kekana At 26, Nthabiseng Kekana is building a practice that refuses the boundaries between art and spiritual work, between contemporary expression and ancestral knowledge. Fresh from her debut solo show Sankofa: A Call to Remembrance at FNB Art Joburg this September—where Lagos-based Wunika […]

Woven Histories: Hair in East and Southern Africa — Ritual, Resistance, and Rebirth

Woven Histories: Hair in East and Southern Africa — Ritual, Resistance, and Rebirth Eembuvi braids worm by women of the Mbalantu tribes in Namibia

Woven Histories: Hair in East and Southern Africa — Ritual, Resistance, and Rebirth The eembuvi-plaits of Mbalantu women before the Ohango initiation ceremony, Namibia, 1930s. Photograph by C.H.L. Hahn. Collection Antje Otto. Editor’s Note: This feature is part of Guzangs’ ongoing exploration of African hair traditions, tracing their evolution from spiritual practice to global artistry. […]

How Colonial Morality Still Polices African Fashion

How Colonial Morality Still Polices African Fashion FLY02238

How Colonial Morality Still Polices African Fashion Akamba Warrior (Kenya): Image No. 10768. Courtesy of Penn Museum Archives. Before colonial rule, most communities wore practical, hand-made garments: woven cotton wrappers in West Africa; smocks and robes for traders and farmers; leather and beadwork in parts of the Sahel and southern Africa; wool and barkcloth where […]

The Milaya Project: Embroidering Resilience in Uganda’s Largest Refugee Settlement

The Milaya Project: Embroidering Resilience in Uganda's Largest Refugee Settlement Milaya Project 20201211Nora Lorek 0005 2

When Swedish/German photojournalist Nora Lorek first set foot in Bidibidi, northern Uganda—one of  the world’s largest refugee settlement, home to over 250,000 South Sudanese—she did not expect to discover a textile tradition that would transform her work. It was 2017, and she had come to document Uganda’s refugee response, curious to understand how a functioning […]

Homegrown to High Fashion: African Musicians’ Style Journey and Cultural Pride

Homegrown to High Fashion: African Musicians' Style Journey and Cultural Pride Burna Boy in Ozwald Boateng

African musicians have long used fashion to reflect their cultural roots and global ambitions. In the early 2000s, as genres like Afrobeats gained momentum, artists championed local designers, wearing traditional fabrics like kente, adire, and kitenge to celebrate heritage and support homegrown talent. As their fame crossed borders, many embraced Western luxury brands like Louis […]

Ananse Center for Design Opens in Lagos: A New Integrated Hub for African Creatives

Ananse Center for Design Opens in Lagos: A New Integrated Hub for African Creatives reception

For years, Nigeria’s creative industry has dazzled the world with talent and imagination, yet struggled to translate that brilliance into sustainable business growth. From fashion to furniture, countless designers and innovators have been constrained by inadequate infrastructure, limited access to global markets, and deep dependence on imported materials. The result: a sector overflowing with ideas […]

Anthony Azekwoh is The Nigerian Artist Building His Own Cinematic Universe

Anthony Azekwoh is The Nigerian Artist Building His Own Cinematic Universe The bridesmaid

When Anthony Azekwoh began drawing, he could hardly imagine how far that impulse would carry him. His trajectory—from writer to digital painter to sculptor and curator—speaks to a restless creativity and a conviction that has positioned him as one of the continent’s most successful digital artists. Born in Lagos, Anthony describes his childhood as formative. […]

Not Every Lot Sells: What Bonhams’ African Art Auction Really Reveals

Not Every Lot Sells: What Bonhams' African Art Auction Really Reveals IMG 2846

When Bonhams launched the auction for Modern & Contemporary African Art in London, it added yet another chapter to the evolving story of how African and diaspora art is being valued and revalued on the global stage. Now scheduled for 8 October 2025, it will arrive with all the usual signals of a market-watching moment: […]

Africa Fashion Arrives in Montreal: A Global Conversation Continues

Two women stand before the wall reading Afrique / Africa Mode Fashion at the McCord Stewart Museum opening night. One wears a vivid cobalt blue draped ensemble with gold accessories, the other in an elegant black dress with statement earrings and a glittered handbag, capturing the evening’s blend of style and celebration.

Walking into Africa Fashion in Montreal feels like arriving at the latest stop in a global conversation — one that began in London, traveled through Brooklyn, staged in Melbourne, and now lands here to shed new light on diasporic and local voices. Originally mounted at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London from July 2, […]

Woven Histories: A Series on African Hair

Black-and-white photograph of Amazigh women from Morocco, their long braids decorated with charms and beads, wearing traditional garments.

A three-part Guzangs series on African hair: how it has been styled, what it has signified, and how those traditions are evolving region by region. Hair across Africa has long carried lineage, spirituality, and social standing. Woven Histories traces that record across three regions, beginning in the Maghreb and ending in East and Southern Africa. […]