Ifeanyi
Monkey Business
Monkey Business
By Ifeanyi Dike Jr
Arise Magazine Lagos Fashion Week, 2012 redefined fashionably late, period! Being 48 hours behind schedule, in an environment brimming with fashionistas, tensions were bound to flare. Evidently, this year’s show was destined to be an interesting one – whether it turned out good or bad.
Forgivably, the first day of the show did not hold but one would latch this to preparatory issues. It was not until, the second day’s inadequacies did people start to realise something might be wrong. The kick-off time kept moving upwards, forcing people to move from the lobby to the venue and disappointingly back when it did not start at the set time without any confirmed explanation.
At 10pm, people had given up any hopes of seeing a fashion show that day. It was then the models decided to put up their own show. Now the bone of contention was that the local models, on hearing what the international models earned were upset at the significant difference. They did not take this lightly, storming out to the organizers in protest. Prince Nduka, Publisher of Arise and Thisday and brains behind the fashion week explained that this was so because of their level of experience (or inexperience) and professionalism. In addition to the night’s chaos were speculations that power supply was the primary reason the show did not hold as planned amidst several other inadequacies. Disasters that flooded the first two days ranged from accommodation issues to transport and logistics. At the end of the second day, whether the show was to go on or not was as good as everyone’s guess.
However, the show did go on, even if it did a couple of hours late. Seventy-Seven designers were congested to show in next four days plus a concluding award show, this meant quite a tedious adventure.
When the shows finally began, all chaos disappeared, as though no disturbance had previously occurred. Photographers, journalists, models, designers and stylists got in their ‘show-mode’ and suddenly, fashion alone took its place as the order of the day. Different from previous years, the audience was packed with people you can call clueless or arguably irrelevant to the process. This was apparent because these were the ones that were simply overdressed (and not in an artsy way) or the ones that looked like they were headed someplace else but decided to stop by first.
Next to fashion, the Arise grounds are somewhat relevant for networking which is what many people got up to, including me. The designers however, stole the hearts of many with designs that will surely (if not already) draw international appeal. Designers that showed on the first day included Mai Atafo, Laquan Smith, Loza Maleombho, Femi Handbags, Imane Ayissi, Toju Foyeh, Re Bahia and others.
Whether the audience purchased clothes or not, the crowd’s enthusiasm as some models strutted down the runway was more than enough. Designers like Mai Atafo and Toju Foyeh experienced this treatment. Others such as Laquan Smith and Loza Maleombho, who later went on to win the awards for Emerging designer of the year and Young designer of the year respectively, were climaxes of the evening. Loza Maleombho did not disappoint in the quirk department despite making use of familiar fabric while Laquan Smith took us into the future with his choice of fabric, colour palette and overall design.
Other designers, the audience – consisting of editors, journalist’s, fashion critics and well, novices were anxious to see were veterans such as Tiffany Amber, Jewel by Lisa, Ozwald Boateng, Kluk CGTD, Petrou/Man, David David, Odio Mimonet, Gavin Rajah and emerging designers like Bridget Awosika, Maki Oh and CLAN.
Ozwald Boateng who closed the Arise 2012, show and bagged a well-deserved Lifetime Achievement Award was a grand finale everyone was frantic to see. The British fashion designer of Ghanaian decent, famous for his for his trademark twist on classic British tailoring style did not cut expectations short and he got a standing ovation to show for it.
It was not only the designers that captured our attention – present were, international models such as Aisha of America’s Next Top Model fame, Oluchi and South Sudanese beauty, Alek Wek whom many African models seeking to break into the international scene aspire to.
The minor or major (depending on how you look at it) deficiencies in logistics and other aspects are some of the signs that the Fashion industry in Nigeria and some parts of Africa is in its baby stages. Some of the designers have done well for themselves and have been able to gain some international acclaim. Designers such us Deola Sagoe, Jewel by Lisa and Tsemaye Binitie have been many times featured in international press and had their designs worn by international celebrities. For the models, an international crossover would be the ultimate goal and for a show of this magnitude, one can in a few more years see it taking its rightful place on the world’s fashion map as Africa’s foremost fashion week with a powerful capability to put fashion designers and models on the world map.
Regardless of the hullabaloo that began this astronomical fashion event, one can agree that the purpose for which we were all gathered in the name of fashion was fulfilled. We converged from all parts of the world, interacted with one another, witnessed beautiful fashion and were a part of something big – Arise Magazine Lagos Fashion Week, 2012.
By Ifeanyi Dike Jr
‘At first, the notion of a fashion week in Nigeria seem laughable given the lack of a structured fashion industry. But the organisers of Arise FW are on a crusade to challenge that premise. And for that they get a lot of credit. The recently concluded Arise fashion week that drew crowd from Africa & beyond is lending credence to the rich ingenuity of African prints and her Designers. This is a subtle yet deeply striking message to the world that Africa is more than an inspiration for the stereotypical “tribal prints”, we can make high fashion clothes too that aren’t just wearable but can compete at the international market.
And yes this is all cool but the question remains: Were the true fashion elites who have the actual fashion interest to purchase such as the A-list celebs, high fashion boutique owners, international buyers and stakeholders, present at the shows? Because without these people, this would be another redundant social call for fame whores and socialites alike who just pretty-up to take pictures that end up on fancy blogs. And a loss for the hardworking designers.
Of course not without eye-rolling challenges, Arise FW is bent on giving African designs a voice, & with 2 seemingly successful shows in tow so far, this world is starting to pay attention. Eventhough it remains to be seen.‘
By Ifeanyi Dike Jr
‘Arise magazine – the good, the bad and the ugly, made it even more memorable. From the tragic protest rumours, to the almost 77 diversely gorgeous designers, Arise Fashion Week 2012, is definitely an event to remember. I loved every moment of it’
By Ifeanyi Dike Jr
‘Arise Magazine fashion week was great, got off to a slow start but once the shows started you forgave the organisers. The shows went on without a hitch. Seamless, the models, the music, the clothes. It was an international experience brought to our doorstep. You could have transposed everything onto any runway in fashion capitals like New York, Milan, Paris and it would have fitted right in. I loved Poisa’s collection. I thought it fun, creative and quite edgy. It was also quite interesting to see the fashion on the red carpet. I must say was inspired by a few pieces both off and on the runway. Really looking forward to AMFW 2013′
By Ifeanyi Dike Jr
‘Fashion lovers like me looked forward to the Arise Magazine Fashion Week 2012 for weeks. And yes, we did the countdown.
6th of March finally came and oh were we excited!
Even though the first two days were filled with technical issues that resulted in the cancellation of the shows, we were still glad to show up on the third day.The shows were amazing. From the designers to the models, clothes, jewellery, crew, everything was world class. Its safe to say that Africa now has a permanent place on the world’s fashion map’
By Ifeanyi Dike Jr
‘To say the Arise Magazine Fashion Week was a success would be stating the obvious. Putting Africa firmly on the map in the world of fashion, designers, models, backstage crew gave a brilliant show and then some. Though first plagued by electrical inadequacies in the first few days, the remaining… made up for it handsomely. From futuristic ensembles, avant-garde artsy dresses to dramatic floor-length looks, we saw it all..’
By Ifeanyi Dike Jr
‘Arise Magazine Lagos Fashion Week 2012. The 1st 2 days were a disappointment with tent troubles, Electricity wahala and Models “OccupyingArise” but when shows actually started on the 3rd even though at late hours, people kept the energy up and things went “smoothly” So did the rest of the week. Overall, I really enjoyed AMFW 2012 asides the the ups and downs and the “hoo-haa Palava”. I got to do shows with Oluchi, Ogy Okpe and Alek Wek and had fun with other models like Millen, Aminat and Tansey’