The Sunday Guardian

People and places through a Scottish historian’s lens

- CORRESPOND­ENT

After his debut show in 2016 titled the Writer’s Eye, renowned author and historian William Dalrymple is returning to the lens in another exhibition of black-and-white photograph­s, chroniclin­g people and places, and the inter-relationsh­ips among them, in the Historian’s Eye. The exhibition will be on view from 12 October till 31 October at Vadehra gallery, New Delhi.

Born in Scotland in 1965, Dalrymple is a Scottish historian, art historian and a prominent broadcaste­r and critic. He was educated at Ampleforth and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was first history exhibition­er then senior history scholar. A fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, his works include books like From the Holy Mountain: a Journey among the Christians of the Middle East; Nine Lives: in Search of the Sacred in Modern India and The Last Mughal. He is a regular contributo­r to the New Yorker, the Guardian, the TLS, and the New York Review of Books, and is the India correspond­ent of the New Statesman.

The Historian’s Eye presents a photograph­ic record of William Dalrymple’s travels across the country over the last two years while researchin­g his latest book titled The Anarchy, published by Bloomsbury in September 2019. It features a unique set of images of the places where art and history were being made in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and includes a small selection of photograph­s from modernday Pakistan.

William Dalrymple is well-known for his writing, but photograph­y was his first love, the artistic outlet of his youth. The purchase of a Samsung Edge camera phone in recent years led to his re-discovery of the medium. Dalrymple’s approach to photograph­y — facilitate­d here by the mobility and immediacy of a camera phone — is intuitive and instinctiv­e, while his aesthetic reflects the sensibilit­y of polished, economical prose, resulting in stark, high-contrast images pared down to their essence.

Photograph­s are intrinsica­lly bound to place and time, but Dalrymple’s images create a wrinkle in time that highlight an intermingl­ing of the monumental past and fleeting present. Each photograph reveals a narrative tension within itself, between stillness and movement, history and reality. A boy skips down the passage, a cyclist turns at the gate, a hawk circles the dome and three generation­s of a Kalash family come together in a single frame: the past by turn is present, unveiled, subverted and transforme­d in the contempora­ry moment through the historian’s lens.

 ??  ?? Heading Home, Shygok Gorges, Pakistan.
Heading Home, Shygok Gorges, Pakistan.
 ??  ?? Dawn over Skardu, Pakistan I, by William Dalrymple.
Dawn over Skardu, Pakistan I, by William Dalrymple.

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