Carlos Idun-Tawiah Ghanaian, b. 18/5/1997
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40.6 x 61 cm / 16 x 24 in
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Evening hums softly at the edge of the Atlantic, where the light blushes the sky and folds itself into the water. Love arrives here without urgency, spreading across the grass in small, tender arrangements. Two figures sway at the left, lost in a rhythm that belongs only to them, hands threaded together as if to keep time from slipping away. Their smiles are easy, the kind shared when the world briefly disappears and there is only the warmth of another palm.
On the blanket, laughter spills louder than the waves. A woman in red leans over the man resting in her lap, offering fruit to his open mouth, turning an ordinary gesture into devotion. The picnic around them is a quiet abundance: bottles catching the last light, oranges and pineapple punctuating the soft horizon. Celebration lives in stillness, in the way their bodies recline as though the day itself has chosen to rest beside them.
To the right, a trumpet sends its notes into the dusk, carving an invisible bridge between shore and sky. The musician’s stance is sure, his sound summoning movement from the woman before him, her dress fluttering as she turns toward the sea. Their silhouettes are etched against water and light, answering music that needs no stage and no permission.
In this photograph, love refuses to be a single story. It is the shared joke on the blanket, the dance steps half-remembered yet confidently attempted, the melody that wraps each figure in the same golden air. The lake, the horizon, the fading sun become witnesses rather than backdrop. Black tenderness here is expansive and unapologetic, framed not by struggle but by leisure, style and unfiltered delight. On this quiet shore in Saint Louis, intimacy is as simple and miraculous as a picnic at the edge of the world.