Jun 27, 2023

Nigerian AI artist creates a fashion show for elderly people

Screenshot 2023-06-27 111931
The project’s inspiration came after Malik’s mum suffered a stroke. [Source: slickcityafrica.com]

A Nigerian visual artist has launched a project to help curb cultural biases in Artificial Intelligence (AI) results by curating a fashion show featuring black elderly people – groups that are often left on the fringes of fashion culture.

Visual artist, fashion designer and filmmaker, Malik Afegbua, 38, received global attention last month when he posted his AI-generated images on social media showing older people flaunting the fashion runway in colourful garments.

As part of ‘The Elders Series’, the images challenge stereotypes around how older people, especially those of African heritage, are perceived.

Untitled design (15)
Malik Afegbua. [Source: Facebook]

The project’s inspiration came after Malik’s mum suffered a stroke. Being close to her, Malik wanted to create a happier image.

“I just needed an outlet to find a way to express myself and not think about her on a life-support machine. I wanted to think about her in a happy place,” he told CNN.

Malik said that until his mother’s stroke, he had only worked experimentally with images of black people on AI platforms, but he found that these images weren’t accurate or of quality. 

Racial and gender bias in AI has been a hot topic recently, as facial recognition technology was proven to be less accurate for black skin and AI art platforms can produce pictures that reflect the cultural biases of images found on the internet.

Screenshot 2023-06-27 111707
Malik Afegbua created "The Elders Series" using the AI platform Midjourney, and Photoshop. [Source: slickcityafrica.com]

While Malik knows the enduring power of AI in the arts world, he also knows it is no match for humans. 

He said that since he shared the series, Malik has been invited to present his work all over the world and has received recognition for drawing positive attention to older people.

“I’ve had many associations that have to do with the elderly contact me asking how we can collaborate,” he said.

As an amateur photographer and visual artist, Malik was given a Canon camera as a gift which opened the door to filmmaking. He has gone on to create films, corporate videos, series two and three of Netflix show “Made By Design”, as well as a biopic docudrama on Nigerian designer Nike Davies-Okundaye.

Malik can be found @slickcityceo on Instagram and Twitter.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Self-management in home care

 New Toolkits To Drive The Way Forward Toolkits developed for providers and consumers to implement high level self-management.  The Department of Health has funded COTA Australia to conduct a two-year project designed to strengthen the capacity of the aged care sector to better respond to the existing and emerging challenges of the aged care reforms. ... Read More

Stumbling Onto a Fun Way to Start a Family Conversation About Death and Dying

In the USA, a 2012 survey by the California HealthCare Foundation found that while more than three quarters of respondents “said it was important to express their end-of-life wishes in writing, fewer than 1 in 4 have done that.” However, according to Boston Globe journalist Kay Lazar, that tide may be turning, and “momentum may... Read More

ACT Become First Australian State To Propose Specific ‘Elder Abuse’ Laws

Aged care and the welfare of older people have become a permanent fixture in news headlines throughout Australia’s dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. While the majority of news has been centred around COVID-19 and infection control measures, last week, the ACT Government quietly proposed a new set of laws that would see crimes committed against... Read More
Advertisement