Ikire Jones

In pictures: Challenging perceptions of Africa through art (BBC)

An exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, northern Spain, aims to show how a new generation of Africans are giving the world a fresh perspective on their continent. Making Africa brings together the work of 120 artists and designers.

Image copyright Omar Victor Diop

Image caption Senegalese photographer Omar Victor Diop's work focuses on the personalities who make up the booming cultural scene in his country. He works with his subjects, like artist Mame-Diarra Niang shown here, to bring out their personalities through the props and the pose.

Image copyright Mario Macilau

Image caption Mozambican photographer Mario Macilau aims to capture the hip youth of his country's capital, Maputo. As well as portraying contemporary fashion the pictures also refer back to the heyday of African studio photography, the exhibition catalogue says.

Image copyright Jeyfous/Oyéjidé

Image caption The work of tailor Ikire Jones is celebrated in this print imagining Nigeria's commercial capital, Lagos, more than six decades in the future. The sharply dressed man in the foreground is described in the catalogue as a tailor's apprentice who wants to make clothes for the citizens of a new Africa.

Image copyright AFP

Image caption Kenyan artist Cyrus Kabiru creates items out of discarded objects. He has made a series of wearable spectacle sculptures to challenge the way we look at things - as a reference to how Africa can often be perceived in a negative light.

Image copyright Bodys Isek Kingelez

Image caption Bodys Isek Kingelez sets out to design futuristic buildings that challenge the way a western city looks. This model - Congolese Red Star - also represents his socialist values and the artist says he wants to create a new world with cities "full of peace, justice and freedom", the exhibition catalogue quotes him as saying.

Image copyright Ojeikere Estate

Image caption The photography of Nigerian JD Okhai Ojeikere highlights the creative ways women wear their hair. He wanted to establish a record of the styles as well as widening their aesthetic appreciation.

Image copyright Pierre-Christophe Gam

Image caption Pierre-Christophe Gam designed the website for singer Taali M. He said he wanted to use the site to transport the viewer to an ancient African kingdom using the French singer, who has Congolese, Chadian and Egyptian roots, as a guide.

Image copyright Wangechi Mutu

Image caption Kenyan Wangechi Mutu's short film The End of Eating Everything is a critique of our consumer society. The film shows a Medusa-like figure - played by singer Santigold - eating a swarm of birds. She eventually implodes, giving birth to numerous female heads, the catalogue says.

Image copyright Malick Sidibe

Image caption Malick Sidibe's photos taken in Mali in the 1960s captures the spirit of the freedom of the time, which some contemporary artists are trying to recreate. This picture, taken in 1963, shows a young couple relaxed about expressing themselves and the way they feel.

Image copyright Adjaye Associates

Image caption Architect David Adjaye was asked to design a new pavilion for the transport hub at Park Station in South Africa's main city, Johannesburg, The pavilion will combine a modern look with references to the historical look of the station.

The Making Africa exhibition is on at the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, until 21 February.