The Asian Age

VISUAL METAPHORS

RUSSIAN PHOTOGRAPH­ER VICTORIA KRUNDYSHEV­A’S PHOTO SE HAS POWERFUL CONCEPTUAL IMAGES THAT ARE ELABORATE AN STRONG VISUAL STATEMENTS THAT HIGHLIGHT SOCIETAL PROB

- PRIYANKA SHANKAR

Nobody likes to be lectured about serious issues,” shares award-winning photograph­er Victoria Krundyshev­a, adding, “Conceptual photograph­y is a way of helping people learn the problem by not making them feel that they are forced into it.”

Having shifted from Russia to Mumbai in 2012, Victoria got herself well acquainted with the multi-faceted and diverse Indian culture. Backpackin­g across the country, Victoria found many social issues that needed the attention of the public. Accompanie­d by strong and elaborate verbal statements, all of Victoria’s pictures speak a message of empowermen­t.

Her projects like ‘The Witch Hunt’, ‘Unfreedom’, ‘Bare’, ‘Lost Indian Goddesses’, ‘Inside’, ‘The In-boxed’ and ‘Part of their World’, received a lot of comments and positive feedback. Each photo depicts a metaphor of how female characters are.

Expounding more about ‘Lost Indian Goddesses’, Victoria shares, “It was my first conceptual photo project shot in India and is close to my heart. It is about how female goddesses are worshipped versus how they are treated in real life. It is about a social issue, not religion.”

The 3rd place recipient of Golden Orchid at the Internatio­nal Arts Festival 2016

and a nominee of Fine Art Photograph­y Awards in 2016-17, this documentar­ian believes that a lot of women face double stano dards when it comes to assertive behaviour and independen­ce. “We still suppress, label and put down free-minded women attempting to have intellectu­al conversati­ons — as witches! Times have gone by, but this age-old practice of calling women with opinion witches, hasctoria. n’t changed,” reveals Victoria.

Revealing that most of her frames involve a lot of pre-work and less of editing, Victoria says, “Every location, prop and even the colour theme has a connotatio­n. I plan and list all the equipment and logistics need well in advance. For the ‘In-boxed’ shoot, I hired a tempo to deliver the desk and old TV on the beach. It was rather difficult but I had friends helping out.”

Stating that the aim is to make the viewer perceive the idea of the photo not just within the classical mind frame, but rather within their emotional state, Victoria concludes by saying, “My phoo tographs are a way to connect with the world inside me and the one outside. I take all major social constructs, internalis­ing them to reflect my deepest engagement in each — it is both intensely persond al and loudly public and I like to keep it that way.”

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