Dressed to be seen
The streets have long been a space to subvert colonial power and reposition agency within BIPOC and queer bodies. Dressed to be seen celebrates how BIPOC and LTBG+ bodies show resilience, offering strength in the face of adversity and joyful affirmation and self-love, documenting intimacy and indomitability.
This is a group of artists who inspire, challenge, and engage with Fashion and its subversive characteristics, reflecting a BIPOC point of view. These are are artist that are interested in exploring how the works engage with each other, suggesting alternatives that use Fashion to traverse our present, disseminate future forms of knowledge, center collective healing, and forge new vocabularies to stake our claim to our place in society.