The Sunday Guardian

Sher-Gil’s self-portraits are given a new life with this photograph­ic revival

Two Delhi-based artists, Samira Bose & Pakhi Sen, have attempted to create photograph­ic duplicates of painter Amrita Sher-Gil’s self-portraits. Bhumika Popli writes about this unique tribute to one of India’s best acclaimed modernists.

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that left me stunned. One image where she is draped in golden cloth stayed with me. I felt a sense of awe towards her. I thought, ‘Look at this woman, probably in her early 20s, with wild hair on one side, laughing at you unabashedl­y.’ This image displayed a certain freedom and gutsy attitude to me. I felt she defied all the barricades society created for women, especially at that time.”

Bose, after being enrolled in her present course, saw this particular painting almost daily as it was displayed at her department’s library. “There she was again at the entrance of my department’s library and I saw her almost on a daily basis,” she says. “My respect for her only grew.”

As you go through the images prepared by Bose and Sen, you begin to ask yourself if Sher-Gil herself would have liked to explore the medium of photograph­y in the same way. Incidental­ly, Amrita’s father, Umrao Singh SherGil, used photograph­y to document his family, and later the artist Vivan Sundaram, Amrita’s cousin, created a series of photomonta­ges titled Retake of Amrita, where he used photograph­s of SherGil and her family and inserted them in her artworks (as well as in her father’s photos that featured her).

Talking about the creative inception of her current project, Bose says, “It all started on the Halloween night when Pakhi and I were looking at the updates on our social media account. We saw many of our friends dressed up as Frida Kahlo, the Mexican painter known for her self- portraits. We thought, which Indian artist would have a similar influence over people? The name, quite naturally, came to us. It was Amrita Sher-Gil. We immediatel­y decided to do the project.”

For this project the artists approached four of their friends, and have created six photograph­s in total. In terms of the design and representa­tion of the photograph­s, the artists used easily available items from their homes. They used fabrics from the boutique of Sen’s mother, who is the owner of a clothing brand. Sen says, “We rummaged through unstitched clothes at the boutique, bed sheets and sarees at home and also included our own clothes for the shoot.”

The entire project neither took much money nor time for its completion. “Everything was spontaneou­s here. All six photograph­s were done in one afternoon. We gave 15-20 minutes to one photograph. We did make-up for each other and were ready to go,” adds Sen.

For inspiratio­n, Bose and Sen looked at the works by the Bangalore-based artist Pushpamala N. and the Iranian photograph­er Azadeh Akhlaghi. Bose says, “We are fascinated by the works of both Pushpamala who brings herself in her many series, and Akhlaghi who recently recreated infamous death scenes from Iran. We read a lot on their respective works and were inspired by them.”

The two were equally moved by Amrita Sher-Gil and tried to find out how freedom looked in a patriarcha­l society at that time. The end result left them overwhelme­d. Bose says, “Amrita is a timeless figure. When we looked at the final images we were surprised as how much we resembled her. We wanted to embody Sher-Gil as at this stage and age, when we are in our early 20s, we are discoverin­g freedom. We are trying to embody the sense of freedom in the heavily patriarcha­l society she must have come across like we do.”

“We are trying to embody the sense of freedom in the heavily patriarcha­l society she must have come across like we do.”

 ??  ?? (L-R) Samira Bose, Pakhi Sen and Faiza Mookerjee posing as subjects in photograph­s inspired by Amrita Sher-Gil’s self-portraits (used as inset).
(L-R) Samira Bose, Pakhi Sen and Faiza Mookerjee posing as subjects in photograph­s inspired by Amrita Sher-Gil’s self-portraits (used as inset).
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