This is what Africa's fashion renaissance looks like...

This is what Africa's fashion renaissance looks like...
A colourful revolution — After forging a career documenting a cycle of hard news, photographer Per-Anders Pettersson fell in love with Africa’s flourishing fashion industry, rekindling his affection for positive stories that go unseen.

Until recently, the only stories coming out of Africa were negative. If you had a positive story, editors weren’t interested.

I have been covering hard-hitting social issues since the ’90s, whether it’s famine in Ethiopia, civil wars in the Democratic Republic of Congo or the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Botswana and South Africa.

The mission of the photojournalist tradition I work in is to highlight tough stories like these.

South_Africa_025
But when you see the same things happening over and again, you get emotionally tired. You start to wonder if what you’re doing changes anything.

A lot of journalists grow quite cynical by following the news cycle from story to story, from place to place. But I couldn’t stay sane doing that.

I prefer to develop projects over the long term. While covering AIDS in South Africa, for example, I kept returning to the same rural hospice.

Even though it’s sad to watch people get sick and die, meeting people again helped build a connection.

Senegal_010
Those relationships allowed me to learn more, to develop something meaningful – and it was the only way I could cope with covering such challenging issues.

Maybe it’s because I’m getting older, but I want to focus on more positive stories in Africa. I have been amazed, overwhelmed and uplifted by the creativity of the African fashion scene.

It’s a wakeup call to outsiders, a sign that a new, successful Africa is rising. The economy is stronger, driven by new companies and industries.

The growing middle-class have money to spend on what have traditionally been Western luxuries, like fashion.

I was working on a project exploring South Africa’s new middle-class when I experienced my first fashion week in Johannesburg back in 2009.

South_Africa_038
I became fascinated by this colourful and progressive new world. The experience set me on a path which would, over the next five years, take in 16 African countries, nearly 500 shows and the work of countless designers.

My book African Catwalk documents the creative revolution spreading across the continent.

It shows how Africa is using fashion as a tool to overturn foreign stereotypes and rewrite a more positive narrative for itself in the eyes of the world.

The brilliance of the fashion speaks for itself, but I was struck by the inventiveness of the shows.

They’re often held in unexpected locations like museums, golf courses or an old bus factory.

South_Africa_034
But sometimes the settings are chosen to make a political statement, like staging a show in an old courthouse or on Johannesburg’s Nelson Mandela Bridge.

Last December, Mozambique Fashion Week opened on a runway of Maputo International Airport.

A tropical rainstorm had just subsided as an airplane came to a halt before us; a door cracked open and fashion models began descending its steps like a catwalk to kick off the show.

As the event unfolded, right there on the airport’s tarmac, a jet bound for Europe took off in the background.

It was one of the many moments during this project where I was overwhelmed by the ambition and the creativity of Africa’s emerging fashion industry.

Rwanda_004
Its phenomenal growth is a sign that Africa is becoming culturally self-assured. But I wish more designers here would tell their own stories because there are so many.

I think you have to be inspired by your heritage and your own experience, your own upbringing, filtering it through an individual and contemporary interpretation.

I thought about finishing the project two or three years ago, after just seven or eight countries.

I’m really glad I pursued it because as I got more and more invites, the project accelerated and I was able to show the continent in much more depth.

I kept going because I really believed that in these images I could reveal the renaissance of the bright, new Africa.

African Catwalk is published by Kehrer Verlag. Check out Per-Anders Pettersson’s online portfolio.

This article appears in Huck 57 – The Documentary Photo Special IVSubscribe today so you never miss another issue.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Latest on Huck

In a city of rapid gentrification, one south London estate stands firm
Culture

In a city of rapid gentrification, one south London estate stands firm

A Portrait of Central Hill — Social housing is under threat across the British capital. But residents of the Central Hill estate in Crystal Palace are determined to save their homes, and their community.

Written by: Alex King

Analogue Appreciation: Maria Teriaeva’s five pieces that remind her of home
Culture

Analogue Appreciation: Maria Teriaeva’s five pieces that remind her of home

From Sayan to Savoie — In an ever more digital, online world, we ask our favourite artists about their most cherished pieces of physical culture. First up, the Siberian-born, Paris-based composer and synthesist.

Written by: Maria Teriaeva

Petition to save the Prince Charles Cinema signed by over 100,000 people in a day
Activism

Petition to save the Prince Charles Cinema signed by over 100,000 people in a day

PCC forever — The Soho institution has claimed its landlord, Zedwell LSQ Ltd, is demanding the insertion of a break clause that would leave it “under permanent threat of closure”.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Remembering Taboo, the party that reshaped ’80s London nightlife
Music

Remembering Taboo, the party that reshaped ’80s London nightlife

Glitter on the floor — Curators Martin Green and NJ Stevenson revisit Leigh Bowery’s legendary night, a space for wild expression that reimagined partying and fashion.

Written by: Cyna Mirzai

A timeless, dynamic view of the Highland Games
Sport

A timeless, dynamic view of the Highland Games

Long Walk Home — Robbie Lawrence travelled to the historic sporting events across Scotland and the USA, hoping to learn about cultural nationalism. He ended up capturing a wholesome, analogue experience rarely found in the modern age.

Written by: Isaac Muk

The rave salvaging toilets for London’s queers
Music

The rave salvaging toilets for London’s queers

Happy Endings — Public bathrooms have long been contested spaces for LGBTQ+ communities, and rising transphobia is seeing them come under scrutiny. With the infamous rave-in-a-bog at an east London institution, its party-goers are claiming them for their own.

Written by: Ben Smoke

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now