(10 Apr 2022)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Manaus - 9 April 2022
1. Indigenous fashion show runway, audience
2. Various of Indigenous model walking on runway wearing an outfit representing the Guaraná tree
3. Indigenous model walking on runway with traditional body paint, shirt with feather illustrations and traditional accessories
4. Various of Indigenous models walking on runway with traditional body painting and clothes with traditional patterns
5. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Adana Silva, Baré Indigenous Group:
"The fight for the land is happening in Brasilia at the moment but also here. In the fashion world it is important (to fight), to raise awareness."
6. Various of stylist painting models with traditional patterns
7. Various of Indigenous models waiting before fashion show
8. Indigenous model walking on runway
9. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Ismael Fracklin, Munduruku Indigenous Group:
"It's very important for us to show our culture, our accessories that we craft with animal teeth, skin, these sort of things."
10. Indigenous models walking on runway
11. Indigenous stylists posing for photograph
12. Various of Indigenous musicians at venue, audience
STORYLINE:
Loud cheers and applause greeted Brazil's first fashion show wholly organized by Indigenous groups, who showcased their cultural attire at a show in the Amazonian riverside city of Manaus.
The native-inspired fashion provided an appreciative audience with a glimpse into the rich cultural and artistic reality of the thousands of Indigenous people who inhabit the vast rainforest.
It was a significant milestone for a country with an often-conflicted relationship with its large native population.
Models from various tribal groups strutted down a runway decorated with traditional pattern and guarded by two young Indigenous warriors.
The show, called "Voices of History," was held in the Park of Tribes in the city, a venue that represents 36 ethnic tribal communities in the state of Amazonas.
Despite its huge size, the state is thinly populated, with most people living in small riverine communities along the many tributaries of the Solimoes and Negro rivers.
According to organisers, the show was designed to showcase the rich cultural development of the many diverse tribal groups that inhabit the jungle.
A total of 37 models wore designs by 31 Indigenous stylists which were marked by colourful dresses made from natural fibre, native painted graphics and bones and feathers.
The models also had tribal tattoos painted onto their bodies and faces.
The Munduruku, Satere-Mawe Tikuna, Bare, Tikuna, Desana, Witoto, Miranha, Karapana and Kambela tribes were among the groups who featured in the show.
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