even wallpaper, it turns out, can have an agenda. The American artist and activist Malene Djenaba Barnett is talking to me from her elegant Brooklyn townhouse, and behind her is a wall covered with her own, instantly recognisable design, Mosaic, created for the LA-based interiors brand Lulu and Georgia. This dynamic pattern with metallic accents ‘celebrates the legacy of Afro-Caribbean women potters’, she explains.
Legacy-making is Malene’s mission (well, one part of it) – not so much for herself, but, more importantly, for her many silenced ancestors. ‘I think about what we’re going to leave behind, and how we have to take agency over our narrative,’ she explains. ‘We can’t rely on anyone else to tell our story.’ That’s why, she adds, ‘it’s really important for me to tell these…
