80
Fashion Jobs
L'OREAL GROUP
Demand & Supply Planner
Permanent · NEA IONIA
PROCTER & GAMBLE
Junior Brand Manager
Permanent · ATHENS
L'OREAL GROUP
E-Commerce Manager, l’Oréal Dermatological Beauty Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Financial Controller - l’Oréal Dermatological Beauty Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Key Account Supply Chain Manager
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Social & Advocacy Manager – Consumer Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
PROCTER&GAMBLE
Warehousing Purchasing Junior Manager
Permanent · ATHENS
L'OREAL GROUP
Sales Representative, Professionals Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
l'Oréal Partner Shop (Lps) Experience Manager, Professionals Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
FOOT LOCKER
Συνεργάτης Πωλήσεων
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
CHRISTIAN DIOR COUTURE
Femme Department Manager - Astir
Permanent · ATHENS
MASSIMO DUTTI
Βοηθοσ Υπευθυνου | Massimo Dutti Θεσσαλονικη
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Execution Planner (Temporary Contract Due to Maternity Leave)
Fixed-term · ATHENS
PROCTER & GAMBLE
HR Administrator
Permanent · ATHENS
LOUIS VUITTON MALLETIER
Stock Supervisor (Astir)
Permanent · ATHENS
LOUIS VUITTON MALLETIER
Store Manager Nammos
Fixed-term ·
CHRISTIAN DIOR COUTURE
Store Manager Astir
Permanent · ATHENS
CHRISTIAN DIOR COUTURE
Sales Assistant - Astir Boutique
Permanent · ATHENS
CHRISTIAN DIOR COUTURE
Senior Sales Assistant - Astir
Permanent · ATHENS
CHRISTIAN DIOR COUTURE
Menswear Department Manager - Astir
Permanent · ATHENS
RALPH LAUREN
Sales Associate
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
RALPH LAUREN
Sales Associate
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
By
AFP
Published
Apr 11, 2022
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Brazil's first indigenous fashion show 'a form of resistance'

By
AFP
Published
Apr 11, 2022

Proudly donning majestic feathered headdresses, models sing an ode to the rain while a makeup artist draws geometric patterns on their faces, arms and thighs in preparation for Brazil's first-ever indigenous fashion show.

"It is a feeling of happiness and pride," 19-year-old model Moan Munduruku told AFP ahead of his turn on the catwalk in Manaus in the Brazilian Amazon.


37 models -- women and men -- represented 15 indigenous groups of Brazil taking part in the month-long Intercultural Exhibition of Indigenous Fashion in the Brazilian Amazon's largest city - AFP


"We are very eager to show our talent, in sewing, in crafts. To show the world that indigenous people can also succeed" in fashion, he said.

Moan is one of 37 models -- women and men -- representing 15 indigenous groups of Brazil to take part in the month-long Intercultural Exhibition of Indigenous Fashion in the Brazilian Amazon's largest city.

For the entire month of April, the catwalk is to host the creations of 29 indigenous designers.

"It's a form of resistance, a way to overcome stereotypes," event organizer Reby Ferreira, 27, told AFP.

"Here in Manaus, unfortunately, many people are ashamed or even afraid to recognize that they have indigenous blood. Our goal is for everyone to feel included and to show our culture to everyone through these clothes."

The designers use natural elements in their creations, including the spearlike teeth of the peccary -- an Amazonian boar -- the red guarana fruit, acai seeds and coconut shells.

The same geometric patterns sported by the models are repeated in the fabrics that envelop them.

"My outfit evokes the (coming-of-age) ritual of the Ticuna girl," said Kimpuramana, a 17-year-old model sporting a white dress adorned with black diagonal stripes.

On the runway, a presenter announces the ethnicity of each model and explains the symbolism behind the clothes and accessories they wear.

Saturday's show was hosted at the Rio Negro Palace, an early 20th century building that now serves as a cultural center.

"I feel privileged to have been able to attend such an event in this place. We are generally excluded from such sites. Today I can see my people telling their story through fashion," said participant Bianca Mura, 24.

As the models walked down the catwalk to appreciative applause, thousands of indigenous Brazilians gathered in the capital Brasilia some 3,500 kilometers (2,175 miles) away, for an annual mass camping event called Terra Livre (Free Land).

The gathering is both a rally for indigenous rights and a protest against the government of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, who is in favor of opening indigenous reserves -- already hard hit by deforestation -- to mining and farming companies. By Louis GENOT, Orlando JUNIOR

Copyright © 2024 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.