India Today

ENCOUNTER SPECIALIST

SHIVARAJU HASN’T QUIT HIS DAY JOB OF A POLICEMAN. IN FACT, HIS BEATS AS A COP AND A PHOTOGRAPH­ER OVERLAP A GREAT DEAL

- —Chinki Sinha

Known these days as “Cop Shiva”, Shivaraju still works as a police constable in Bengaluru, even as his photograph­y garners attention from the art world in India and abroad. His ‘Street as Studio’ exhibition featured in this year’s India Art Fair; he’s been invited to document Sweden’s embrace of refugees by the Swedish Art Council; and later this year has exhibition­s planned for Switzerlan­d.

His beats as cop and photograph­er are overlappin­g. “As a documentar­y photograph­er, my practice happens mainly on the streets, and my subject is always the human being and his deep rooted emotions. I capture the ordinary man in an extraordin­ary situation, and his conflict or dialogue with the surroundin­gs,” he says. “As a policeman I have developed a very sharp eye, always attentive to the world around, looking for unusual things that can be problemati­c to society.”

Born to a family of farmers in Karnataka, Shivaraju grew up in the town where Sholay was filmed. Like millions of other rural Indians, he joined the police for the security of a government job. After relocating to Bengaluru, he discovered the 1 Shanthiroa­d gallery/studio, where he met many interestin­g visual artists, scholars, filmmakers and photograph­ers— but it was on an assignment at his day job that he discovered a talent of his own. “The first project assigned to me [by the police] was to photograph the migrant labourers in the constructi­on sites of Bengaluru,” he says. “That was a turning point for me, and when I decided to take my photograph­y to the next level.”

That ambition is clearly evident in ‘Street as Studio’—a project in which Shivaraju explored the migrant’s fragmented relationsh­ip with the city by photograph­ing workers in front of the murals commission­ed by the city’s municipali­ty to “beautify” the streets. The pictures contrast the garish paintings of heritage monuments, exotic animals, gods and goddesses, and spectacula­r landscapes to the hardscrabb­le reality of the city dweller.

“Photograph­y gives me the flexibilit­y and versatilit­y to capture the reality the way I like to show it. I am very influenced by the magical realism art school, in which reality is shown through a curved mirror, and allows me to focus on the eccentric side of reality that many times goes unnoticed, showing the public act as a masquerade performanc­e,” says Shiva.

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 ?? Photograph­s by COP SHIVA ??
Photograph­s by COP SHIVA
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