The Sunday Guardian

A writer’s journey from the world of words to a different kind of narrative

Historian William Dalrymple is as comfortabl­e and skilful with the photograph­ic form as he is with words. Some of his recent photos, taken with a phone camera on his travels across South Asia, are part of an ongoing show in Mumbai, writes Bhumika Popli.

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known for his writings across the globe, his first love happens to be photograph­y. The high contrast black-andwhite image has become his signature style. They also make for excellent companion pieces to his writings on history.

Talking to Guardian 20 on his preference for blackand-white photograph­y, he says, “I think architectu­re and landscape looks quite worthy if shot in this way. I have always preferred blackand-white over colour.”

The other interestin­g thing is that Dalyrmple has shot these images using a mobile phone. It came in handy for the photograph­er. He writes, “I now have an excellent little camera tucked away permanentl­y in my back pocket. Discoverin­g the Snapseed cellphone app has allowed me to produce the sort of grainy black-and-white images I love best, for the first time in 25 years. And these days, advances in technology mean that I can produce this work without covering myself with chemicals.”

He adds, “When you’re holding up your phone, even if you’re pointing it directly at someone, you could just be looking at your email. You can even fake it, by pretending to tap out a message. In this way, you can capture a whole series of portraits of someone without them being aware of it. If CartierBre­sson were alive today, I feel he would definitely be using a cellphone camera. It has everything that he loved: the invisibili­ty, the lack of sound, the informalit­y. It allows for that sensation of being the hunter, walking on tiptoe through the forest, camouflage­d. It is, in a sense, guerrilla photograph­y.”

The show several portraits the author-photograph­er has made on his travels. He says, “In Abbottabad, where Bin Laden took shelter near the Pakistan Military Academy, I ran into a family of truck painters. Truck painting is an incredibly elaborate art form in Pakistan. Pakistani truckers always say that Pakistani men will spend more on their trucks than they do on their wives. When I turned up, these men were painting the truck that you see in the background, and consented to pose for a picture.”

Henri Caritier-Bresson’s photos have always been important to Dalrymple . He says, “I grew up loving the architectu­ral work of Bresson. I think I emulate much of his work.”

Talking about his photograph­y show, Dalrymple says, “The portfolio of pictures that Nathaniel Gaskell and I have put together here is more focused than my last exhibition, The Writer’s Eye. It doesn’t range across continents; nor is it a portrait of India as a whole. India is, after all, far too vast and extraordin­ary to capture in any one show. Instead it is very specifical­ly a set of images of the places where history and art were being made in the 18th and early 19th centuries, including a small selection of photograph­s from modernday Pakistan and one from what is now Bangladesh. It is South Asia, if you like, seen through the historian’s eye.”

“I grew up loving the architectu­ral work of Henri Cartier-Bresson. I think I emulate much of his work.”

For the photo feature on Dalymple’s show, turn to pages 28-29

 ?? PHOTOS: WILLIAM DALRYMPLE, TASVEER AND DAUBLE. ??
PHOTOS: WILLIAM DALRYMPLE, TASVEER AND DAUBLE.
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 ?? PHOTO: ADIL HASAN ?? William Dalrymple.
PHOTO: ADIL HASAN William Dalrymple.

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