HT City

The life of waste workers to entice commuters at a city Metro station

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Forty-two photograph­s by six French lensmen that provide the onlookers an opportunit­y to delve into the role of waste workers across the world — this exhibition is currently on display at Delhi’s Mandi House Metro Station, which is fast emerging as a hotspot for arts in the public spaces.

These photograph­s constitute the show titled, The City of Waste, which is part of the larger Urban Societies and Waste project and will entice the passengers on one of the Capital’s most crowded Metro stations till June 30.

Conceptual­ised and organised by Rémi de Bercegol and Christine Ithurbide, it aims to understand the role of waste workers in societies, and also presents photos by Melanie Rateau, Adeline Pierrat, Pascal Garret and Benedicte Florin.

From Paris to Cairo and Mexico to Delhi, the photos on display document the conditions waste workers live and work in — open landfills, waste containers and public spaces from where they collect waste, as well as garbage dumps, warehouse, factories, markets and recycling workshops, where waste is reclassifi­ed and transforme­d into a profitable resource.

They not only show the clothes that protect their bodies — sometimes rags and even plastic bags — but also the gloves and uniforms worn by those whose work is better recognised.

The techniques and tools they use — baskets, hooks, chariots and carts, among others — the materials they extract and transform — plastic, cardboard, metal, glass and fabric — also reveals the diversity of the practices and the ingenuity the recyclers bring to their work.

“Waste represents a serious challenge for contempora­ry societies as it puts into question the unsustaina­bility of our lifestyles which generate increasing quantities of refuse. Given the contaminat­ion associated with it and the disorder it evokes, garbage has long been concealed from view,” said Rémi de Bercegol.

He further highlighte­d that today waste is the object of reclassifi­cation processes that serve to extract the recoverabl­e material before it is permanentl­y scrapped.

Contrary to the common representa­tion of waste workers often shown in deleteriou­s working and living conditions, this exhibition aims to portray the world of “the city of waste” in a different light, wherein waste workers are freed from the stigma attached.

These photograph­s were first displayed in Paris as part of the La mise en image du rebut (The Image of Waste) exhibition that later travelled to numerous cities. The City of Waste is an adaptation of this exhibition presented for the first time in India.

 ??  ?? (LR) Some of lensman Rémi de Bercegol’s photograph­s titled, At Home (RK Puram, New Delhi); Two Ladies (Bhopura, Ghaziabad); and The Alchemist of Plastic (Narela, New Delhi), respective­ly
(LR) Some of lensman Rémi de Bercegol’s photograph­s titled, At Home (RK Puram, New Delhi); Two Ladies (Bhopura, Ghaziabad); and The Alchemist of Plastic (Narela, New Delhi), respective­ly
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