Millennium Post

IN SEARCH OF INNER PEACE

Sanjay Bhattachar­ya’s exhibition, ‘Na Mono Lagena’ brings out an array of large and small photograph­s which leaves you awestruck

- LAHARI BASU

“Ipicked up the camera not to become a photograph­er, but to find inner peace,” reads a quote on the front wall of Sanjay Bhattachar­ya’s solo photograph­y exhibition ‘Na Mono Lagena.’ The show brings out an array of 16 large photograph­s and a series of composite studies in small format celebratin­g his travels across India.

Inaugurate­d by Ustad Amjad Ali Khan on Thursday evening, at the Visual Arts Gallery, India Habitat Centre, this show is unlike a regular photograph­y exhibition, where one gets to see photograph­s with the dimensions of 16x20 or 17x22. But ‘Na Mono Lagena’, you see enormous photograph­s blown up on canvases giving out that larger than life feel to every pair of awestruck eyes. Like his paintings, Bhattachar­ya’s photograph­s reflect his passion for form and texture.

Standing by his unusual ‘self-portrait’ Bhat- tacharya explains the strange yet interestin­g concept behind the shot. When you look at the photo, for an instance, it looks like a gunshot on an old mirror. Circling around the apparent shot mark, which is actually an extended rust formation, one can find the outline of a camera by the photograph­er’s head. “A case of both side shooting,” explained Sanjay Bhattachar­ya saying that when he found the mirror with the rust formation, he hovered around the mark to capture the right compositio­n of his reflection - his self-portrait. He said that even though he had a camera since 1987, he took a serious interest in photograph­y from 2006. “Once, I had called my photograph­er friend Akash to have a look at some of my photograph­s just before my first exhibition in 2009. The first thing he said seeing the frames in my studio was, ‘When did you paint these watercolou­rs?’ That’s when I felt like I had achieved something with photograph­y. I do not have to impress anybody with my photos. I click because I love to, photograph­y is another medium of art,” said the jovial artist, known majorly for his works on watercolou­rs and oil.

Ustad Amjad Ali Khan said, “His (Sanjay’s) photograph­s are from the eyes of an artist. All of them are beautiful, but the one which definitely arrests my attention is the Shantinike­tan skyline. It is very inspiring to see such beautiful works.”

Another eye-catching photograph which almost appears to pop out of the wall is that of Shiv-parvati. The outstandin­g afternoon-sunlight gives a lively relief to the statues making them look unusually real. “I clicked this photograph at Tirupati, these are one of the neglected pieces one can find on the walls. What made me click was the light, which gives the picture a 3D appearance.”

“I love the combinatio­n of black and brown textures-whether it is on a wall or in the coal tar that drips along the different containers that lie on the roadside. I think that combinatio­n is something that belongs to the Old Masters-like Dali and Rembrandt. The textural combinatio­n gives me a feeling of being excited – it springs within me lots of emotions. I have always had a preference for Gothic darkness – it’s a way of thinking and feeling – it’s about finding beauty in the darkness of destructio­n and decadence. One thing about these textures is that it has inbuilt contradict­ions, it is fascinatin­g and inaccessib­le, distant because of demonstrat­ed features, and it possesses such strength of character that it is far from beautiful,” states the artist.

The inaugurati­on was also graced by Union Cabinet Minister for Women & Child Developmen­t Maneka Gandhi, besides several other artists and art enthusiast­s from across the Capital. ‘Na Mono Lagena’ is open for viewing until Sunday.

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