FASHION | AFRICA | NOW Podcast Por with Beatrace Angut Oola arte de portada

FASHION | AFRICA | NOW

FASHION | AFRICA | NOW

De: with Beatrace Angut Oola
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The Fashion Africa Now Podcast ignites interesting conversations with designers, creatives, historians, researchers, fashion players and industry experts on what fashion in Africa and the diaspora is today, systematically digging into its past, present and, more importantly, shaping its future. The fusion of rich and diverse sub-nations, cultures, ideas, and talents from the African continent, and by extension the African diaspora, has produced irresistible trend-setting fashion, styles, aesthetics, sounds and a way of life globally. Yet in the shadows of this allure the conflict between slow fashion, sustainability in Africa and fast fashion is a conversation to be encouraged. Fashion Africa Now podcast has the permission to use the music and the sounds created by Blackstereo music. Please send inquiries and questions to: podcast@fashionafricanow.com

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Episodios
  • PRESS CONFERENCE
    Jul 24 2025

    PRESS CONFERENCE UNGERMAN – UNDEUTSCH

    Five Years After Black Lives Matter: What Has Truly Changed?

    Tap in to hear voices that are not waiting for a seat at the table - We are building new rooms, new runways, new businesses, new realities. It’s about ownership!

    Five years after the global uprising under the banner of Black Lives Matter and in the heart of the UN Decade for People of African Descent, we pause to ask the urgent, uncomfortable, necessary question

    What has truly changed?

    In this episode, recorded live during Fashion Africa Now’s third press conference, leading women of African descent from the creative industries and visionary business consultants — including Beatrace Oola, Kemi Fatoba, Meriem Lebdiri, Boitumelo Pooe, and Jacqueline Shaw — come together to reflect, reckon, and reimagine. The conversation is moderated by Prof. Marcellous Jones, with powerful written statements contributed by Dr. Mahret Ifeoma Kupka and Isi Ahmed.

    We explore the deep fault lines that still define the German fashion scene:
    ✔️ Selective visibility.
    ✔️ Token & Colorism inclusion.
    ✔️ Structural exclusion masked as progress.

    Author Fatima El-Tayeb’s term UNGERMAN serves as a framework to unpack how racialized communities – especially Black people, Muslims, and Roma – continue to be treated as permanently foreign, while whiteness remains the silent standard of national identity.

    🎧 Together, we ask:

    • Who gets to define African fashion?
    • Who profits from it – and who is systematically left out?
    • How can solidarity-based economies disrupt extractive systems?
    • What would real, structural investment in Black creatives in Germany look like?

    We don't need more symbolic gestures. It is time for redistribution, recognition, and radical imagination because fashion is more than fabric. It is memory. It is resistance. It encompasses the past, present, and future.

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    1 h
  • Picture And Reconstruct Me Different: Delphine Diallo
    Jul 28 2021

    Enjoy the flow that Senegalese-born New York-based international known photographer, Delphine Diallo, releases as she liberally shares her journey of enlightenment; working as a talented graphic designer in the Parisian creative scene yet not able to get past the glass ceiling in the corporate art world. A climactic epiphany for change and a divinely orchestrated connection with the legendary Peter Beard saw her to collaborate on the Pirelli calendar shoot in Botswana. This turning point led to an awakening that saw her begin her own vision quest. Delphine describes herself as predominantly a student before a photographer, exploring realms of spirituality, science, anthropology and martial arts and shifting through the third, fourth, fifth and sixth dimensions, creating her own realities. Proud of her African origin and drawing from the power of her heritage, we hear how she engages with the energies of empowering black females and aims to accelerate levels of consciousness through her work. Known for portraiture and her focus on the black female body, Delphine is passionate about the reconstruction of the African woman and capturing the truth that is covered by the patriarchal white male gaze smokescreen that dominates the global visual language.



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    1 h y 21 m
  • Trade With Africa: Skander Negasi
    Jul 14 2021

    Skander Negasi, CEO of Trade and Fairs GmbH, introduces us to the developing fashion and textile hub in East Africa. With manufacturing costs increasing in Europe and Asia, buyers are looking for new destinations. Following the successful launch of the Origin Africa trade show in 2012 in Ethiopia alongside US Aid, since then many international trade fairs, events & conferences within different industries, including textile, apparel and fashion have been organised. He is responsible for the biggest exhibition of this nature in Africa, the Africa Sourcing and Fashion Week (ASFW) in Addis Ababa. The ASFW hosts over 4000 exhibitors and 6000 trade buyers. This includes H&M, Hugo Boss, Mango, Zara and more; and of course smaller local boutique designers and craftsmen are included, as well as huge industrial factory equipment. The main trends Skander highlights are the digitalisation of goods, sustainable production of fabric, and the practice of African Continental Free Trade (Africans doing business with Africans). For many African designers keen to expand their retail horizons, we encourage listening to Skander’s global insights from a business and trade perspective, “Without investment you don’t get anything…this is the homework for African designers… to promote their brand and work with shops… if they always depend on supporters, then it’s going to be very very tough.”


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    52 m
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