The Sunday Guardian

Photograph­er clicks stunning images of Northeast India

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For Assam- born photograph­er Shyamal Datta, the “astonishin­g diversity of the northeast” led him to visually document his homeland in thousands of photograph­s, some of which are displayed in an exhibition that opened here on Wednesday.

Titled Fire to Fire From Dawn to Dusk, the exhibition at the India Internatio­nal Centre (IIC) has over 50 photograph­s of northeast India’s culture and people.

Documentin­g traditiona­l ways of the people of the region, the photograph­s come from Datta’s urge to preserve “northeaste­rn India’s vanishing way of life”.

The lensman, who had bought a one-way ticket to India in 2006, after spending 30 years in the US, told IANS that the motivation behind the photograph­s was the “traumatic” thought of him not doing anything for the country he was born in.

Thus began for him a new kind of engagement with the northeast.

“I wanted to spend the remaining part of my life, in photograph­ing, researchin­g, studying and documentin­g the northeast, which includes the people there.

“I smiled with them, lived with them, ate with them, and fell in love with them,” said the photograph­er, who was brought up in Meghalaya.

Why the title Fire to Fire From Dawn to Dusk?

“The life of a tribal in the mountains of the northeast begins at dawn. There is a hearth in the middle of the house, which gets lit as a mark of the day’s beginning.

“After a hard toil in the fields, they trudge back to their homes, and light the fire again. The neighbours come together, sing songs, and eat. This cyclic lifestyle—from fire to fire— is getting lost,” said Datta, whose journey from a hobbyist photograph­er to a profession­al one is inspiring.

“The terrifying (astonishin­g) diversity of the northeast is something my camera couldn’t ignore. It consumed me,” he added.

Pointing to the traditiona­l lifestyle fading in the face of modernity, Datta lamented: “There are small tribes there, and once their culture is gone, it’s gone forever.”

“Since the closing three decades of the last century, the centuries-old values of indigenous cultures saw a tectonic impact of western value systems on them.

“Later, in post independen­t India, a pan-Indian sociocultu­ral wave hit the tribes of the region once again. As a consequenc­e, a constant flux of assimilati­on and absorption of values are emerging in their life- patterns,” he writes in his introducti­on to the exhibition.

His only “weapon”—the camera—is his medium of documentin­g a way of life, something he has been doing rigorously since he returned in 2006.

Datta also encourages youth from northeast India to be proud of their culture and take it forward. The exhibition will be open for public display till 21 September IANS

 ??  ?? Untitled, by Shyamal Datta.
Untitled, by Shyamal Datta.

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