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Yellow top with wide, long sleeves, stretch pants printed with blue, green, orange, red and yel…
pants
Yellow top with wide, long sleeves, stretch pants printed with blue, green, orange, red and yel…
Pants (98.90.2) shown with hat (2016.82.17)
Pants
Designer (1954 - 1990)
Spring 1988
Spandex
Gift of Julia Szabo
Object number98.90.2
Patrick Kelly – a Black American, Paris-based designer known for celebrating Black culture – reinterprets kente cloth as a high fashion print, paired with a basket headpiece. This usage reveals the complexity of Black American engagement with African culture. Originally worn by Asante royalty, kente became a Ghanaian national symbol after independence from Britain (1957). Some Black Americans adopted it as a Pan-African motif of Black pride, but art historian Nii O. Quarcoopome writes that, as a general diasporic fashion statement, kente becomes “a catchall design for things ancestrally African. Kente is now the Motherland, reinvented, packaged, and made palatable for mass consumption.”
DescriptionStretch pants in spandex printed with multicolor Kente Cloth design
Exhibitions