Tag: craft

  • Amanda Laird Cherry – Stitching Cultural Narratives Through Cloth

    “The fabrics and the cuts we wear tell us about our society” – Amanda Cherry

    A pleated cuff shudders under the folded forms of flesh. The iconic white shirt – elongated and extended. Facilitating a gentle ease of motion while still maintaining architectural line and form. Languid limbs and leafy tendrils lie juxtaposed to an urban interior. Horizontal reflections distort and duplicate. Perpendicular lines intersect, simultaneously concealing and revealing the bodies beneath. Amanda Cherry’s menswear line, ALC and adjacent ladieswear collection, Amanda Laird Cherry, are caught in the tender balance, structure and organic flow.

    Amanda’s work as a designer is located within an inherent love and admiration of her home – South Africa. Steeped in a context of multi-culturalism, she draws on and is influenced by its diversity. This is extended on a global level – fusing local design with a Japanese influence.

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    “Support local for strategic sustainability.” This sentiment is at the crux of her practice. Amanda has, and continues to foster relationships with local crafters, focusing on developing skills in a collaborative process. All the designers supplying The Space are required to produce their work within the borders of the country.

    Twenty years ago, in February of 1996, Amanda Laird Cherry opened its doors. Initially supplying to boutiques scattered around South Africa and the Durban Designer Emporium it now boasts a global reach.

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    Amanda’s latest Spring/Summer 2016 collection pays homage to this impressive feat and the coastal city from which it was birthed. Facets of Durban’s character were incorporated in the design – from mid-century man-made architecture to the hypnotism of undulating waves and graphic Zulu prints.

    To celebrate two decades in the fashion industry she held a retrospective show of curated works. Ramp collections from ALC and Amanda Laird Cherry were displayed at the Durban Art Gallery. In this reflective show, Amanda returned to the heart of the city in which she and her brand began. Rooted in seminal narratives – capturing threads of South African culture. A commemorative full-circle.

    alc-ss16-sitting-3SS16 Collection – Photography by Roger Jardine

    alc-ss16-ladies-shirt-5SS16 Collection – Photography by Roger Jardine

    alc-ss16-golferSS16 Collection – Photography by Roger Jardine

    alc-ss16-tunicSS16 Collection – Photography by Roger Jardine

  • Jewellery that makes a wearable declaration of Art: An interview with the creator of Inkaturah designs

    What’s most striking about the Inkaturah brand is its modern take on natural materials. I would first come into contact with this brand at Market on Main, which takes place on Sundays in the Maboneng district. My first piece from the brand would be her black choker with a minimalist gold statement jewel in the shape of a small pillar that would well accentuate any long neck line. Her distinct style offers it’s wearer a statement piece that forms a part of the wearer’s style without distracting the eye from their outfit.

    I got to interview the originator of this unique brand, Siphathisiwe Hlongwane who explains how “each statement piece gives the wearer an opportunity to express themselves and is designed to be a miniature piece of art” (Inkaturah, 2016).

    Motlatsi Khosi (MK):   Please could you tell our Bubblegum readers a bit about yourself and how you got into Jewellery design?

    Siphathisiwe Hlongwane (SH):  I have always been creatively inclined and learnt how to draw from the age of 5. I learnt various techniques and art forms over the years and chose to study architecture. I completed my Masters in 2012 and worked in the profession for two years. I ventured into the fashion industry to follow my passion, working for a global and locally based fashion brand. I began designing and selling jewellery as a second source of income and soon decided to pursue this full time, as I fell in love with the process and collections.

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    MK:  Please explain the inspiration behind your designs and what characterized the Inkaturah brand.

    SH: Inkaturah means “In essence”. The brand name is derived from Katurah, my second name which means perfume. The analogy of a person’s scent to their character is often used to characterise one’s person.  Inkaturah becomes the character found within their spirit.

     My business is a contemporary African jewellery brand which creates unique pieces for the woman who loves art and wants to make a statement. The aesthetic is a combination of layering of geometries with materials. I have merged the conceptual skills I gained in architecture with my fascination with colour and materials.

    The designs are inspired by various aspects. Some take on the shape of symbolic pieces, such as the drum Ring which is shaped like a little drum. Others are created by using the “negative pieces” or the off cuts and often result in equally beautiful designs as the original piece.

    Some of my other pieces are created to be multifunctional, offering the wearer the opportunity to express two separate aspects of themselves.  I design templates from which the stained wood is laser cut. The resulting geometric shapes are layered with glass beads, copper, fabric and brass, through hand assembly.

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    MK: You mostly use metals and wood in your work. Please explain your choice of using natural materials and how it has impacted your jewellery design.

    SH: I began using wood as this is a material that I am most familiar working with. I have chosen to include brass, copper, fabric and beads because it creates a great contrast to the wood, breaks monotony and allows for the exploration of various designs. Making a very small change can be the difference between a piece being greatly loved or unappreciated. By constantly introducing new materials it ensures that there are endless designs which keep clients looking forward to new works.

    These materials have impacted my style of jewellery because they are reminiscent of Ancient African jewellery. They create a good balance with the Eurocentric nature of some of the geometries and designs and natural materials.

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    MK: What are your plans for your brand and what should your followers be looking forward to in future in regards to your style and craft.

    SH: There will be an online store coming soon and the pieces will soon be available globally to its growing foreign following. The intention is to reach as many different countries as possible and to be accessible to all those who appreciate the work.

    There has also been a huge request for male collections and this will definitely be explored soon. The style will more or less remain the same as it is currently unique in its own way. The main focus will be on improving the quality, whilst introducing the presence of precious metals in the pieces. Once this has been well established it will be great to venture into other accessories such as bags and sandals.

    You can follow Inkaturah designs on their Facebook page, or contact Siphathisiwe directly on info@inkaturah.co.za.

  • Sewing black history back on to the streets – in conversation with Nkuli Mlangeni, founder of The Ninevites.

    The Ninevites was a resistance movement who scoured the South African frontier during the late 1900s. Having started the collective under The Ninevites name in 2012, Nkuli Mlangeni would do so because of how fascinated she was in its story, which was shrouded in so much myth.

    What the Kagiso native found crazy was that so many people didn’t even know of their story. The Ninevites lends its name from the Bible, whose people were religious rebels who challenged God.  These young men engaged in criminal activities under a colonised South Africa and sought to challenge the injustices faced by themselves as well as their people.

    Yet what pushed the artist, designer, and collaborator to choose this name was the context in which she found herself working at the time. She worked in the media and curated pieces in Cape Town, and started to see how in spaces, advertising in particular, black culture was being misrepresented.

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    Fashion as the political

    Nkuli decided that she wanted to make things, things like those made during fashion week, but would use “normal” looking people as her models. It is in the normal that she finds her inspiration. For her, black style and how she sees it occurring on downtown Johannesburg’s streets and walkways is being shown in “Move” and “Drum” Magazine. She believes two different styles are at play: those represented in Fashion week and those where she get her inspiration, from such streets and her neighbours.

    The artist draws her style from Ausi Lele, from her mother’s friends, guys, the people who hang out in Kagiso. She loves the kind of style that you don’t pay too much for, the kind that requires you to work with things you already have and are most practical.

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    Yet there is another goal within her work, and that is about wanting to bring people together through fabric.

    Nkuli recently came back from having done research in Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru. For her, South American cultures have similarities to those found in South Africa. Her interests lie in south-to-south collaborations where our histories are similar: there is a shared sense of a colonial history and a sense of responsibility to our waning traditions. She wants to make collaborations within this space, learning from each other’s ideas and the techniques of each other’s crafts.

    It is in such a space that The Ninevites function to bring artists, designers and crafts people together. Nkuli uses this name as a facilitator in making such projects come to life. She spends her time researching and looking for artists, and then working with them to move an idea forward.

    In her latest project, Nkuli worked within the collective to create intricate handmade rugs. Under the collective’s name, she brought two graphic designers, one from Brazil and the other from South Africa, to work on the styling of the rugs. She also brought in a weaver, Mario – a resident in the city of Lima in Peru.

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    Tradition made for now

    It is through such works that we see Nkuli’s obsession with tradition, drawing particular inspiration from the way it is worn by those who follow it.  She gives the example of Zionists, whose religion is steeped in traditional beliefs. She loves how their followers wear their uniforms with such pride, taking care to keep them crisp and white. Right now her biggest inspiration comes from her Ndebele heritage, paying much homage to their motifs in her works.

    Nkuli’s latest works with textiles yielded a piece titled “Mangaliso rug” – a modern take on signature Ndebele design. Its name contains a history, yet its function as a rug makes it applicable to our every day lives.

    Nkuli explains that in her previous works she would print the images of black heroes on children’s T-shirts. She does so to remind people that these people exist. In giving these works the images and names of people in black history, the designer has brought their story back into our lives. She sees such names as a good entry point to having the much needed conversation about our past and to make people question their own understandings of it.

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    Her other works also hold the names of Mangalizo, Queen Zinga, and Thomas Sankara. Nkuli is interested in such stories. She says many are not happy ones, yet they are stories that need to be told and are still relevant, as many black men and woman go through such hell, still today. They are “garden boys” during the day and then fathers at night. Many of them have grown without fathers and yet we have judges who proceed to throw stupid comments about black men, knowing nothing of the many lives that she knows nothing about.

    Yet Nkuli does not consider herself political. As much as her references may be seeped in the political, she does not think of herself as knowing or being educated enough to talk about politics. She wants to work from intuition. She does it because it looks good and because it is accessible to those who would make use of it.

    Black life as living history 

    In creating such works of homage to black life, Nkuli also hopes to move away from the misrepresentation and commodification of black life. Citing the works of Thabiso Sekgala, Santu Mofokeng, and her favourite photographer of all time Sabelo Mlangeni, she sees their works as showing the lives of black people not as objects for consumption. She draws much inspiration from the works of Alexia Webster who documented pantsula life, seeing their works as the celebration of black lives.

    Looking at her work we see a creator unashamedly and beautifully borrow from local crafts and culture. We see her work as paying a type of homage to a living culture under threat in South Africa but by also remoulding it. She creates art that we can wear and use in our homes so as to re-introduce us to black heroes of our past. In doing so, Nkuli shows us how our culture can evolve to suit the complex interactions that youth have to engage in. As black bodies, we wear our history in our skin, in our clothes, and our ideas.

    Nkuli’s work is tantamount to such an expression. Her work reflects a navigation of black selves in a post-colonial space in search for our own spaces. She sees fashion, textiles and style as very much being inspired by her love of cloth. Yet for her, it also plays a much deeper function of connecting people and their ideas to a common purpose.

    You can follow Nkuli on Instagram and on her blog.