"Queen & Kingdom" T-Shirt (Yellow)
"Queen & Kingdom" T-Shirt (Yellow)

Aṣọ

"Queen & Kingdom" T-Shirt (Yellow)

Regular price $42.00
Tax included.

The Brief

  • This is a wearable expression of contemporary African culture, history, heritage.

  • The artwork is an original photograph shot by Nathaniel Akinpelu Williams featuring model @jasmine.jas.mine.

  • Fashion meets Black history – the rings in the photo featured are detailed replicas of an  iconic 15th – 16th century African (Yoruba) artefact

  • The likeness is believed to be of an Ooni (king) of the ancient city of Ilé-Ifè

  • This T-shirt makes a powerful statement and brings Yoruba & Nigerian heritage to the front.

  • Ethically made and sweatshop- free made with 100% certified organic cotton.

 

The Style

  • Classic fit style

  • Set-in sleeves

  • 1x1 rib at neck collar

  • Inside back neck tape in self-fabric

  • Sleeve hem and bottom hem with wide double needle topstitch

 

The Fabric

  • Soft and smooth finish

  • 100% Organic ring-spun Combed Cotton, 15% recycled polyester material

 

The Story

The rings featured in the image are our modern smaller representation of an Ife casting from the Kingdom of Ilé-Ifè that was found buried in a compound in the city.

Ilé-Ifè is an ancient city located in Osun state, Nigeria.  It is the largest Yoruba city in Nigeria, and is considered to be the spiritual homeland and birthplace of the Yoruba people.  In Yoruba tradition, Ile Ife marks the place where the deities descended to the earth and planted the seeds of life.

Ilé-Ifè began to develop as a centre of artistry from around 900 AD.  Ilé-Ifè is globally renowned for its sophisticated 13th to 15th century naturalistic artworks.  These include bronze, stone, and terracotta artefacts. The artists also worked with copper which is a much more difficult material to work with – but they deployed ingenious methods to produce stunning works.

Leo Frobenius, a German ethnographer who encountered bronze and terracotta heads during a 1910 expedition to Ilé-Ifè was over-awed by these artwork’s aesthetics, artistry, and sophistication.  Unfortunately – his tiny puny racist brain was unable to comprehend that these were works produced by local Yoruba people. 

The head featured is one of thirteen near-life sized bronze heads found buried in Ilé-Ifè, and is believed to be the likeness of an Ooni, or king, of Ilé-Ifè and dated between the 14th and 15th century.  They were discovered during house-building works in a compound of Wunmonije (a previous Ooni of Ife). The heads are believed to be created in the likeness of people who lived in the era of the Ooni  (king) Obalufon II.

 

For more information see:

https://artsandculture.google.com/story/12-facts-you-need-to-know-about-ife-art-yemisi-shyllon-museum-of-art/TQWB2S-ClCrcNw?hl=en  

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2010/feb/26/kingdom-of-ife-british-museum-review  

https://face2faceafrica.com/article/the-history-of-ile-ife-the-ancient-yoruba-kingdom-with-africas-most-striking-sculptures

 

 

SIZES                              S            M           L             XL         

Half Chest (cm)               49          52          55          58         

Body Length (cm)            69          72          74          76

Sleeve Length (cm)         20          21.5       22.5       22.5