A letter from Justin K. Rogers
Walking through the Accra Art Center, I was surrounded by artisans who could turn cloth into language, and metal into memory. Their work wasn’t just design—it was devotion. Every
pattern, bead, and brushstroke carried the pulse of something ancient yet alive.
And it made me question something simple but profound:
Why isn’t this revered as luxury?
Why isn’t Africa at the center of fashion’s global conversation?
These questions became my obsession.
I grew up in a world where success often meant assimilation, and where African art was
admired but rarely valued. Yet in Ghana, I saw a different kind of wealth—a creative sovereignty
that didn’t ask for validation. I saw designers who created not to impress, but to express.
That realization became my north star: to build a platform where African fashion and beauty
could speak for themselves, without translation or compromise.
Thus, Hotep Negus was born—not just as a brand, but as a bridge.
Hotep means peace.
Negus means king.
Together, they remind me that power without peace is hollow, and peace without purpose is
idle.
Through Hotep Negus, I’m learning to live at the intersection of both.
It’s more than a business—it’s a journey towards creative liberation.
Every collection, shoot, and story we tell is a small act of restoration—a way to reframe how the
world sees Africa—and how Africa sees itself.
Questions I ask myself:
How can designs heal?
How can storytelling restore what colonization stole?
How can we make peace feel like power again?
These questions guide me—as a creative, a founder, and a Black man rediscovering home.