We will miss you while you are gone Kofi Ansah
Known as the enfant terrible, Ghanaian fashion designer, Kofi Ansah, propelled Ghana on to the catwalks of haute couture.
Going to a Kofi Ansah fashion show has always been an exhilarating and exhaustive experience. “Without clothes, we cannot play our parts,” he once said. A true pace-setter and innovative designer, Ansah always insisted his clothes must always tell a story.
And what stories he told with his clothes and how elegantly he told them.
He would say there was nothing more satisfying than making clothes that make people look and feel good about themselves. “When someone tries on something you have created and she or he turns to look in the mirror, and bursts out in smiles, you know you have hit a bull’s eye.”
He first made headlines on his graduation from the Chelsea School of Art in London and received the ultimate endorsement when he made a beaded top for Princess Anne.
Born in 1951 into an artistic family, he believed he inherited his creative talents from his parents.His father, who was a photographer and classical musician, encouraged him to pursue his interest in art and design.
After graduating in 1979 with First class honours in fashion design and distinction in design technology, he started work in London and was soon making waves in the UK fashion scene. But in 1992, he came home to Ghana, where he was to make an even greater splash.
I was very young at the time and a friend of my dad had something made for me, “Hope you will have the courage to wear it.” It was my first Kofi Ansah piece of clothing. It was a blue and read dress. The top was dramatic, with red patches and sleeves that can only be described as “interesting”. Of course I wore it and it was a “wow-item” in my wardrobe for years.
He soon changed the face of the Ghanaian fashion landscape and set about to blend the richly textured and boldly coloured local fabrics into fashion collections that have attracted a strong customer following in both Ghana and abroad.
Comments
Post a Comment