James Town Beach is primarily inhabited by fishermen who venture out at midnight to catch fish and return at dawn to sell their catch. Most of the sellers are women who buy the fish at wholesale prices. The fishermen often encounter challenges due to the waste that occupies a large area of the beach. This beach is also part of the Gulf of Guinea and connects the largest lagoon in Ghana to the Korlegona Lagoon. Accra, Ghana.

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The Mourning Tide: Reflections on the Coastal Waste Crisis

Taofeek Oyewole Lawal | Nigeria

Mourning Tide is a site-specific multi-media exhibition and social documentary exposing the environmental and cultural toll of global textile waste on the Ghanaian coastline. At Kinshasa Beach, Accra, the work confronts the “Obroni Wawu” (dead white man’s clothes) phenomenon—where 15 million weekly garments turn the Gulf of Guinea into a fast-fashion graveyard.

The centerpiece features a traditional fishing net entangled with recovered shore waste. In place of price tags, oversized labels display degradation statistics and the Western brands fueling the crisis. This installation is paired with photography of “chokers”—massive fabric knots clogging the seabed—and portraits of community members whose livelihoods are strangled by the Global North’s “disposable” culture.

A visual indictment and call for accountability, Mourning Tide forces a confrontation with the consequences of invisible supply chains by exhibiting waste on the very sands where it accumulates. It demands a shift from a linear economy toward a global responsibility that respects the sanctity of local environments and the dignity of the people of Accra.

Oyewole Lawal is a Nigerian documentary photographer dedicated to uncovering the 'unsung heroes' of the global climate crisis. Through projects like Guardians of Gaia, I document the frontline labor of waste miners in West Africa, seeking to humanize their struggle and dignity in the face of urban growth and global consumerism. My work aims to bridge the gap between environmental policy and lived reality, using bold visual narratives to spark conversations around consumption and waste mismanagement. By bringing the unseen into focus, I hope to inspire a more empathetic and sustainable understanding of our shared world.

ArtWorkProject, Chicago

Phone No: +2349053201340

Email: oyewolelawal01@gmail.com

Instagram acct: www.instagram.com/oyewole__lawal

Website: https://oyewolelawal.mypixieset.com/

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