Carlos Idun-Tawiah Ghanaian, b. 18/5/1997
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127 x 127 cm / 50 x 50 in
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Carlos Idun-Tawiah’s “Let the Little Children Come to Me” pulses with the energy and innocence of a Sunday in Accra, Ghana.
In this 2022 photograph, two young girls trace a path from darkened church interior toward a soft wash of daylight, their dresses fluttering in mid-motion. The scene, drawn from his acclaimed Sunday Special series, draws deeply from both personal and collective memory, infusing everyday life with the magic and tenderness which hallmark Idun-Tawiah’s vision.
Their movement is effortless—a swirl of lace and cotton, heels raised, arms extended. It turns the very act of leaving into ritual, a gesture where tradition meets the improvisation of youth. The architecture—arched doorways, chunky wooden pews, patterned tile—grounds the photograph in a sense of place, evoking community, faith, and the rhythms of countless Sundays that shaped stories like his own.
Idun-Tawiah’s lens always honors the beauty and resonance of the ordinary, centering Black childhood not as a fleeting phase, but as a wellspring of grace and hope. Here, freedom isn’t just a theme—it’s visible in every detail: the playful dynamic, the vignette of layered textures, the merging of shadow and light.
The image offers more than nostalgia. Each element carries history—a nod to Ghanaian photo albums and West African portraiture.
These children, poised on the threshold, become living metaphors for possibility: for crossing boundaries, for belonging, and for renewal.
Above all, the photograph is an invitation—an open door to memory, sanctuary, and collective joy. In its lyrical balance of stillness and momentum, Idun-Tawiah’s work reminds us that sacredness is discovered not just in quiet worship, but in laughter and motion, as childhood’s resilient spirit leads the way toward light. Every gesture here is testament to the quiet power of simply being—together, in celebration, and in the promise of tomorrow.