Decoloniality

Recap: Global Fashioning Assembly 2024

The Lowlands Decolonial Fashion Network (LDFN), consisting of FASHIONCLASH, the Linen Project, Crafts Council Nederland, Tailors & Wearers and the Research Collective for Decoloniality & Fashion, organized a participatory conversation ‘What decoloniality means in a Dutch Context?’ as part of the Global Fashioning Assembly 2024 program.

On 11 October 2024, people could join in-person at the Jan van Eyck Academie in Maastricht, while others were welcomed to join the conversation online to reflect on these questions and topics while putting the hands to apply needlework on a textile cloth that was created during the residency.

About the Dutch hosting communities

FASHIONCLASH is a development and presentation platform for fashion (culture) that contributes through crossovers to, on the one hand, the individual talent development of the new generation of fashion makers and, on the other hand, to general awareness of the role of fashion in the world. Established in 2009, FASHIONCLASH initiates, produces and presents work of a new generation of fashion practitioners who research, reflect, contextualize and celebrate contemporary fashion(culture). FASHIONCLASH believes passionately in the positive contribution the art of fashion can make to personal and artistic development, identity building, society, culture and economy.

THE LINEN PROJECT investigates since 2018 and works towards reactivating the economic viability of small- scale local flax cultivation and linen production in the Netherlands. It seeks to reinstate the economy as a social, ecological and cultural domain and to strengthen socio-economic patterns and behaviours rooted in a commoning approach. The inherent connections between (cultural) heritage, education, agriculture, design, crafts, and the economy are activated as well as the exchange of diverse values, knowledge, skills and competencies.

THE CRAFTS COUNCIL NEDERLAND (CCNL), founded in 2012, contributes to the development of crafts and the creative crafts culture in the Netherlands. CCNL is the initiator of a great and growing community of craftsman, museums and educational institutions, economy and government. Each party involved builds a link in the transition to a new form of meaning within the sector. Crafts knowledge belongs to the intangible heritage which gets transferred from person to person. Connecting people who still have this knowledge and people who want learn from it, is the natural result of our work.

TAILORS & WEARERS looks at Afro-Surinamese costume through the lens of craft, anthropology and photography. The purpose of the foundation is to research and preserve, present and provide education regarding Afro-Surinamese costumes. We do this by collecting and sharing knowledge, such as organizing events, meetings and presentations, creating educational material, providing workshops and acting as a knowledge platform, online and oNline, for interested parties and heritage practitioners.

RESEARCH COLLECTIVE ON DECOLONIALITY & FASHION (RCDF) is an experimental platform beyond institutional, disciplinary and geographical boundaries initiated in 2012. It aims to critique the denial and erasure of a diversity of fashioning systems due to eurocentricity, unequal global power relations based on the modern-colonial order and the Euro-American canon of normativity materialised in modern aesthetics. Transcending academe, the Collective aims to experiment with decentral and decolonial ways of knowledge-creation and sharing concerning fashion.

About Global Fashioning Assembly

The biennial Global Fashioning Assembly (GFA), with a first edition in 2022, is a unique online gathering of local fashion communities from all over the world to decenter and decolonise knowledge creation and sharing of body fashioning practices and heritages.

Rather than the event hosting participants, the participants pass on the hosting of the event to ensure self-representation, -determination and governance. Its main aim is to disrupt western-centric international fashion gatherings that often operate as gatekeepers to justify and perpetuate excluding and discriminating logics and validate English-centred knowledge.

Sparked by the grassroots-to-global possibilities of the digital, it goes beyond the limitation of one singular physical presentation, by bringing together a diversity of experiences, knowledges and cultural heritages by a diversity of institutes and communities that self- represent and self-narrate their cultural heritage. The decentralised format is inspired by around-the-world assemblies through which communities share in their own pathways to a politics of wholeness based on the principle that ’we can’t solve our crises using the same way of thinking that created them’ (Grassroots2Global).

Underpinning the GFA are collective ideation, decision-making and execution. Preparations take two years with the hosting communities meeting (bi)monthly to formulate the overall conceptual framework, thematic scopes, hosting communities, planning, budgeting and funding. Tasks are divided organically with smaller groups taking on different responsibilities (planning, budgeting, communication & production) according to the principle ‘by the communities, for the communities.’ Simultaneously, each hosting community decides on their own programme, content(s), format(s), language(s), aesthetics and participants according to its specific experiences and needs.

It is a uniquely innovative and impactful approach about living cultures, craft heritages and fashion knowledges that welcomes a wide diversity of voices and formats. Each hosting community welcomes local stakeholders, communities and audiences, on and offline, in a combination of local languages and English. By using a shared language of ‘fashioning’, the GFA aims to:

  • Create a hosting environment that is decentred, inclusive and co-created;

  • Debunk the myth that the contemporary design and art is global, inclusive and for everyone;

  • Demonstrate pluriversal craft heritages and living fashioning systems beyond the western paradigm;

  • Bring attention to creative ecosystems that consider planet and people over profit;

  • Raise awareness of the violence of the contemporary collections & the creative economy;

  • Promote a just transition to ethical, regenerative and fair creative practices; and

  • Foster counter-strategies against polarisation through art, design, fashion and culture.

For the GFA24, 20 communities in 26 countries, across 6 continents, are hosting between 1- 20 October 2024, for a total of 40 hours of local programming and 20 hours of Sharing Councils at different times to accommodate their local time zones. Programmes address practical approaches to decoloniality in everyday life, exploring the tensions and challenges that arise when design and craft intersect in their local contexts. How to use creative resistance to challenge capitalist, colonial, Euro-centric, anthropocentric, and patriarchal systems of design and education through sustainable, ethical, slow, ecofeminist, decolonial, and circular approaches to fashion?

Program

ABYA YALA Coalition (Latin America)
Tuesday 1 October, 2:30pm UTC+2

'Imagining a decentralised footwear industry' by Cobbled Goods (Canada)
Friday 4 October, 10:00am UTC+2

Reclaiming Community Practices: From Fashion Industry To Fashion Commons by Fashion Act Now (UK)
Saturday 5 October, 10:00am UTC+2

'Kazakh Fashion & Arts: Identity Sandwich' (Kazakhstan)
Wednesday 9 October, 2:00pm UTC+2

UN/FOLDING_RE/FOLDING_FOLDED: Imiphindo kwaXhosa Season 2 - by African Fashion Research Institute (South-Africa)
Thursday 10 October, 1:00pm UTC+2

'Fighting Fascism Through Fashion, Hacking White Supremacy' by the Austrian Center for Fashion Research (Austria)
Friday 11 October, 11:00am UTC+2

'What Does Decoloniality Mean in a Dutch Context?' by the Lowlands Decolonial Fashion Network (Netherlands)
Friday 11 October, 3:00pm UTC+2

DRESS AND BECOME (Chile)
Saturday 12 October, 6:00pm UTC+2

SEWING A GREENER FUTURE FOR GHANA by GiFt (Ghana)
Sunday 13 October, 4:00pm UTC+2

'Evolution of Ancestral Jewelry' by OwnYourCulture (Kenya)
Tuesday 15 October, 2:00pm UTC+2

'Design Magic Through Craft: Textile Alchemy' by Witches of the East Collective(Turkey)
Wednesday 16 October, 4:00pm UTC+2

Mendit Research Lab (Russia)
Thursday 17 October, 11:00am UTC+2

Hui Auaha o Aotearoa - Open Day at the New Zealand Fashion Museum (Aotearoa)
Saturday 19 October, 8:00am UTC+2

Decolonial Fashion and Design: A Global South in Portuguese-speaking (Brasil)
Saturday 19 October, 5:00pm UTC+2

Stitching Stories - Kheta In The Classroom (India)
Sunday 20 October, 12:00pm UTC+2

‘Not in Vogue: Decentering Fashion Narratives in Flanders’ by Losse Draadjes Collective (Belgium)
Monday 21 October, 1:00pm UTC+2

‘Needle and Thread – A Soft Discourse’ by Center for Research of Fashion and Clothing (Croatia)
Tuesday 22 October, 7:00pm UTC+2

Apnaiyat Pakistan Collective (Pakistan)
Friday 25 October, 3:00pm UTC+2

'An Angolan Decolonial Performance' by Fashion + Urban Art (Angola) Saturday 26 October, 8:00pm UTC+2

"Our OLLA is not YOUR OLLA" by Fashion Liberation Collective North Africa
Monday 28 October, 3:00pm UTC+1

Impressions of the event at Jan van Eyk Academy

Open Call Residency: Decoloniality in the context of the Netherlands

FASHIONCLASH is organizing a 5-day residency in Maastricht (24-28 June 2024) centered around the theme of fashion and decoloniality in the context of the Netherlands.

Approximately 10 fashion practitioners will reflect and elaborate on the theme in open conversations, collaborative making sessions, walks and fieldtrips, combined with guest speakers. The outcome, as a ‘result’ from the residency, serves as an open-end but could eventually become a starting point for a documentary, exhibition, publication, podcast, etc.

The content of the residency is centered around the question: What does decoloniality mean in the context of the Netherlands? The aim is not to come up with answers, but create a safe and fertile space for learning, thinking, reflecting, exchanging thoughts and experiences, and eventually posing new questions, that might lead to new projects.

Global Fashioning Assembly 2024

The outcome of the residency will be featured in the programme of the Global Fashioning Assembly 2024 (GFA24), as part of the Lowlands Decolonial Fashion Network (LDFN) hosting. This event takes place on 11 October (15:00 – 17:00, CET). LDFN for GFA24 is a collaboration between Research Collective for Decoloniality & Fashion, together with FASHIONCLASH, The Linen Project, Tailors & Wearers and Crafts Council Netherlands. During this event, the participants of the residency week are going into conversation with each other and the global GFA online community.

Who can join?

This residency is open for everyone from all walks of life, who identify as a fashion* practitioner. Experience within the topic is not required; motivation for participation, availability, flexibility and interest in working with others is more important. Your application consists of a short motivation for participation in the project and a completed registration form, including a CV and a short biography (personal and/or practice).

* fashion as a discipline in the broadest sense of the word, including clothing, textile, jewelry, crafts, research, styling, photography, writing, etc.  

Practical

The residency is a physical event and participants are expected to be present in person in Maastricht, from Monday 24 June until Friday 28 June. Included in the residency week is a stay at The Green Elephant Hostel, in a shared room with other participants. Participants receive a participation fee of €750,- ex. VAT and travel allowance, with a maximum of €60,-).

Interested in participating?

Register before Thursday 6 June 2024 by completing the application form on this page. Selection will be based on first-come-first-served principle and taking into account that participants represent diverse backgrounds and perspectives. A final confirmation for participation will be communicated by e-mail on Friday 7 June.

*It’s no longer possible to register*

By applying, you agree to the Terms and Conditions that apply to participation.


This residency is the first in the series on related to topic of decoloniality in relation to fashion. It is an open process in which we are certainly not experts, but above all a facilitator of a dialogue between different makers and organizations.

For a number of years, FASHIONCLASH has been active in learning and contributing to a better, supportive, equal and healthy system. Supporting initiatives and makers who are committed to this is part of that. We participate in network meetings, lectures and organize knowledge-sharing to learn for ourselves and to show underrepresented perspectives. With this residency, we aim to bring together a network that we have met in recent years around the topic of 'decoloniality' and connect this to other networks or makers and organizations that want to join.

Residency: Decoloniality in the context of the Netherlands is made possible thanks to the support of Creative Industries Funds NL, and supported by Research Collective for Decoloniality & Fashion and organizations connected to Lowlands Decolonial Fashion Network (LDFN) .