ive performances by the likes of kora virtuoso Yacouba Diabate from Burkina Faso and many others create an atmosphere of cultural resonance. Local organizations such as the Rhode Island Council for the Arts, the Providence Department of Arts, Culture and Tourism and the Southside Cultural Center of Rhode Island have supported the festival since its inception in 2020. The event has become firmly anchored in the cultural calendar of the East Coast. In summer 2023, the organizer Chance Boas gave its brand a sustainable visual identity for the first time, with a new logo, new visual language and a new house font: the African version of the inclusive font family Pangea Text.
African Film + Art Festival
Cultural festival with a typographic profile
Pangea Afrikan is an important milestone in the efforts of its designer Christoph Koeberlin to create a sustainable and unifying typeface. Continuous linguistic expansions challenge Western conventions – as more often than not the character sets of most successful fonts only represent European and American alphabets. Thanks to the Afrikan version, Pangea now supports popular African languages such as Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, Lingala, Mende or Umbundu as well as some indigenous languages of North America such as Lushootseed or Navajo … and therefore the languages of at least 430 million people.
The new identity aims to establish an authentic cultural brand that playfully stages its cultural orientation. The capitalized English name of the festival uses Latin characters used in African languages, such as the T with a hook (Ƭ), which is used in the Atlantic language Serer (Senegal, Gambia ...) and the R with a slash (Ɍ), a character from the Kanuri language. Even though the communication and the name of the African Film & Art Festival in Providence are in English, the characters of the African languages indicate the direction of the cultural event.
Osmond Tshuma, Founder and Designer at South African design studio Mam’Gobozi Design Factory, describes the reason for chosing Pangea Text as follows:
Choosing a font was vital because we required one that could also handle Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, or Lingala movie or song titles. Additionally, the icon we had created for the event was geometric, and Pangea Afrikan complimented it quite well. A perfect match.
By the way, Pangea Afrikan is ideal for beginners of foreign languages. At the request of its creator, the font is permanently free in the Standard License, without compromising on quality. With this step, Christoph Koeberlin and Fontwerk would like to provide typographical support to brands, agencies, and designers in their pursuit of African storytelling.