The people and style of Odunde

Mural artist Shaun Durbin adds a portrait of Iymaan Muhammad to his painting-in-progress at the Odunde Festival Sunday June 14,  2026. Billed as the largest African street market in North America, festival-goers are known for their stylish clothing. Durbin met Muhammad in South Philadelphia the day before and asked her, “would you be my muse?”

The Odunde Festival began in 1975 as a community event in South Philadelphia inspired by Yoruba traditions from Nigeria. It has since grown into one of the largest Black cultural festivals in North America.

“Odunde”is often translated as “the celebration has arrived.” The festival is rooted in the Yoruba New Year celebration and honors African heritage, history, and spirituality.

LEFT: Vonetta Jones, (from left), Cynthia Johnson and Alexis Murray. RIGHT: Lea and Damon Cunningham and their grandson, Noah, 6.

As a photographer working a Sunday-to-Thursday shift for decades, I’ve covered this and many other Sunday ethnic, religious, historic, and cultural festivals — always with a street-photographer vibe.

When I was assigned to photograph stylish clothing last Sunday — festivalgoers are known for expressing their cultural identity, heritage, and pride through fashion — I saw it as fun challenge to work outside my comfort zone and channel a bit of Philly influencer Big Rube or Humans of New York creator Brandon Stanton.

LEFT: Penny Thompson RIGHT: Kelvin Beck

Something I am always asked when speaking to camera clubs or groups of amateurs photographers is: “Do you have to ask people permission to take their picture?” Others ask, “Do you need to get their names?” The most consistent question, though, is: “How do you approach people you don’t even know?”

Joe Quinones.

I am not an extrovert, but early on I realized that “hiding” behind my camera gave me the confidence to meet and build rapport with strangers.

LEFT: Partners Julian Livingston (left) and Nyobi Nashedeem-Murphy (right) and Nyobi’s mother, Stacey Daniels. RIGHT: Tyanna Man and Bella Reina (right).

After years of doing it, talking to people has never been a concern. But using a flash outdoors to fill in shadows while also worrying about visual variety — different ages, genders, couples, individuals, and backgrounds — was not the way I usually work.

LEFT: Angelina Fletcher (left) and her niece and nephew, Leah Fletcher and TJ Fletcher. RIGHT: Jamar Williams and Jamar, Jr., 9.

I think it turned out OK, and I look forward to trying something similar with my visual coverage of the many events ahead this summer. Bring on the World Cup, America 250, the All-Star Game, and everything else.

Since 1998 a black-and-white photo has appeared every Monday in staff photographer Tom Gralish’s “Scene Through the Lens” photo column in the print editions of The Inquirer’s local news section. Here are the most recent, in color:

» SEE MORE: Archived columns and Twenty years of a photo column.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *