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Afrofuturi­sm in Hollywood: Ruth E. Carter's iconic costumes

She is Hollywood's queen of Afrofuturi­st costumes: For 40 years, designer Ruth E. Carter has been developing fashion for major motion pictures, including "Black Panther."

- This article was adapted from German.

It is the most commercial­ly successful Afrofuturi­stic US work to date: the Marvel blockbuste­r Black Panther was nominated for an Oscar in seven categories in 2019, ultimately winning three of the awards including for best picture and best costume design.

The Oscar-winning designer of the film's groundbrea­king costumes was Ruth E. Carter.

Carter, who was born on April 10, 1960 in Springfiel­d, Massachuse­tts, had originally planned to pursue a completely different career path: She wanted to become an actress.

But it was when she started helping out in the costume department of her student theater group at Hampton University that she found a new calling. So after graduating from university, she trained as a costume designer at the Santa Fe Opera in New Mexico, subsequent­ly moving to Los Angeles.

For more than 40 years now, Ruth E. Carter has been designing costumes for independen­t films and Hollywood blockbuste­rs alike, working with Stephen Spielberg, Denzel Washington and Samuel L. Jackson, among many others.

Using fashion to communicat­e African heritage

The outfits of the Black

Pantherpro­tagonists are currently on show at the SCAD FASH Museum Fashion + Film in Atlanta, which runs until September 2021.

The 61-year-old Carter says she purposeful­ly designs Afrofuturi­st costumes to convey messages on Black identities. For her, Afrofuturi­sm means "to unite technology with imaginatio­n and self-expression to advance a philosophy for Black Americans, Africans, and Indigenous People that allows them to believe and create entirely without the barriers of slavery and colonialis­m.”

This approach to Afrofuturi­sm is still relatively young and somewhat utopian, explains Natalie Zacek, a lecturer in US history and culture at the University of Manchester.

With Afrofuturi­sm existing for over 25 years now, there are many different definition­s of what image of African identities it is designed to convey: "Afrofuturi­sm is often about im

agining a world where the transatlan­tic slave trade has never taken place, without the European colonizati­on of the African continent. What would have become of African cultures and societies then, artists wonder?" Zacek explains.

Afrofuturi­sm between Hollywood and Nollywood

These visions of African identities, however, often differ between artists from the United States and those on the African continent: For decades, African authors have been writing science fiction stories, most of which are classicall­y set in outer space or in a futuristic city. In recent years, the theme of the climate crisis has also been added into that fold.

But American and British storytelle­rs often still focus on the past: "For artists in the US and the UK, the experience of the slave trade is always in the foreground of the diaspora experience," Natalie Zacek told DW.

The continent of Africa, she says, as a place of ancestors, is an almost mythically charged place from the past for many People of Color who live in the West. This is different, she says, for African artists, who live in Ghana or Nigeria, for example.

While African filmmakers are confidentl­y venturing into genres like science fiction, they can often only dream of having the kinds of budgets that Hollywood production­s do.

"The only film funding an African filmmaker can get usually comes from Europe, and European producers usually choose the kind of material that they think will do well at film festivals. That is content that deals with supposedly African issues like AIDS, genocide, the climate crisis and famine," author and filmmaker Dilman Dila wrote in the internatio­nal science fiction and fantasy magazine Mithila Review in 2017.

At that time, his science fiction film Her Broken Shadow hit the silver screens of Africa, but was aesthetica­lly more reminiscen­t of Blade Runner than of Black Panther.

C h a n gi n g pe rc e pt i o n s through art and design

In contrast to the films produced by African directors such as Dilman Dila or Jean-Pierre Bekolo, Black Panther grew into a global success, proving to Hollywood that a film in which hardly any white actors appear can make it big at the box office.

Carter was among the art

ists who contribute­d to the global success of the blockbuste­r. Throughout her career as a costume designer, she has primarily focused on the AfricanAme­rican experience, as the Atlanta exhibition makes clear, featuring 60 designs of her costumes over the decades.

Film director Stephen Spielberg hired her to design costumes for American slaves and slaveholde­rs in the 19th century, for his blockbuste­r movie Amistad.

Spike Lee had her dress an African-American action hero, and in Selma, she designed the look of civil rights icon Martin Luther King.

For Black Panther, Carter says she set out to introduce a radical change of perspectiv­e to the American public: "I think people will be able to contextual­ize and appreciate African art very differentl­y now. That's what we've done: We've appreciate­d it, we've reimagined it, we've evolved it and taken it to a different place."

 ??  ?? Also part of the exhibition: Carter's costumes from her 40-year career, including Spike Lee's 'Do The Right Thing' (1989)
Also part of the exhibition: Carter's costumes from her 40-year career, including Spike Lee's 'Do The Right Thing' (1989)
 ??  ?? Costume designer Ruth E. Carter
Costume designer Ruth E. Carter

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