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In Kigali, Rwanda, a New Wave of Creative Projects Worth Traveling For

Dieuveil Malonga’s baseball cap and cheeky grin belie his steely commitment to changing the global image of Afro-fusion cuisine. His tasting menu at Meza Malonga—where he also trains chefs—features pan-African botanicals, pre-colonial matriarchal recipes, and produce grown in his seven-acre allotments on Lake Ruhondo, near the Volcanoes National Park. On these volcanic soils, he is opening a second food project with rooms, featuring guest appearances from members of his 4,000-strong Chefs in Africa association, cementing the agricultural Musanze district’s status as a farm-to-fork hub. mezamalonga.com

Moses Turahirwa — the fashion futurist

“Rwandans have an innate creative eye,” says Moses Turahirwa, a designer and a trained civil engineer who earned his master’s degree in fashion at Florence’s prestigious Polimoda. “We grow up surrounded by beauty.” At Moshions, his non-gendered couture pieces are structurally based on fluid, unisex Rwandan drapery and cleverly reference Bantu culture. The use of premium sustainable textiles, botanical dyes, and recycled cow horn helped him win the Designer of the Year award for Africa at the 2022 Abryanz Style and Fashion Awards. moshions.rw

Moshions store displays

Store displays at Moshions

Andrew Urwin

Designer Moses Turahirwa

The designer Moses Turahirwa of Moshions

Andrew Urwin

Winnie Kalisa — the self-taught ceramist

A poster child for Rwandans’ make-it-happen mindset, Winnie Kalisa learned pottery from YouTube and opened her ceramics studio Laini in a flame-vine-clad cottage so idyllic it could have been dreamt up. Her glazed creations, some with the silhouettes of female Fulani nomads, breathe contemporary life into local pottery traditions and grace the shelves of eco-lodge Singita Kwitonda by Volcanoes National Park, where she has opened a second workshop. @laini_studio

Linda Mukangoga — the craft queen

Linda Mukangoga has recently added an outdoor café to her fashion and homeware boutique, Haute Baso, painted in the bold black and white of traditional Rwandan beading. The ethical womenswear designer and Lagos Fashion Week finalist collaborates with female artisans on a line of demure prints in contemporary loose cuts, and curates a selection of Rwandan handicrafts, from sweetgrass baskets to wood carvings from the rural Nyanza district, south of Kigali. hautebaso.com

A version of this article originally appeared in Condé Nast Traveller UK.