| BYWORD | READERS WRITE | ADVERTISE | CONTACT US | SUBSCRIBE | COVER GALLERY | JOIN US ON FACEBOOK | IN MEMORIAM | 100th ISSUE | HOME |
![]() |
| Current Issue | ||||
![]() |
| BYWORD | READERS WRITE | ADVERTISE | CONTACT US | SUBSCRIBE | COVER GALLERY | JOIN US ON FACEBOOK | IN MEMORIAM | 100th ISSUE | HOME |
![]() |
| Current Issue | ||||
| < Back To Article | |
|
Captured Memories
|
| Text by Sitanshi Talati-Parikh | |||||||||
|
Published: Volume 18, Issue 9, September, 2010
|
|||||||||
|
The most ignored aspect of a wedding is the one you would ideally want to do right for posterity – the pictures! Verve looks at various options for the album
Mumbai-based artist, curator and gallerist, Bose Krishnamachari traces the evolution of marriage in India to the extravaganza popularised by the maharajas of yore – and in those times, posed portraiture was the norm. As canvases evolved to bulky and expensive camera film and to the digital varieties of date, the traditional form of posed imagery still remains a part of the wedding legacy. It is only rarely – and more abroad than in India – that the photojournalistic style of wedding photography is popularised, where candid shots are taken and irreverent moments captured to add a sense of realism to the wedding album. Matthieu Foss, photography curator and gallerist (Mumbai) feels that weddings have been restricted to a more conventional and conservative form of photography when creating the family wedding album. From the point of the photographer, Foss points out, they are using this form to merely make a living, not as a creative act. While it would be interesting for a photographer to capture moments from a poignant and radically important time in someone’s life, it appears that the subject’s lack of interest in something different would naturally stem the photographer’s creativity, making it a space that is a mere commercial stepping-stone to more absorbing pastures. And if the photographer were doing something different, it may well be in the space of satire and kitsch. Foss gives the example of French artist Jean-Christian Bourcart, whose first job as a wedding photographer led to him being ‘fascinated by those moments of joy in a crude or absurd reality,’ which later defined his other distinct photo projects.
At the other end of the glamour spectrum, with digital cameras and phone-cams, every other person considers himself/herself an amateur photographer, and impromptu and often unfortunately-candid shots of the wedding-in-process have been documented – much to the embarrassment of the couple-to-be. Loosely termed ‘contemporary wedding photography’, the professional version o f this irreverent clicking serves to capture the imagery of the wedding from the beginning to the end, without predetermined poses but with strong visual appeal. While tradition is great when saying your vows or taking a turn around the fire, capturing eternal moments is an art and should be considered as such. With couples willing to give enough importance to the form, it may evolve into a universally appreciated aesthetic medium.Subscribe to Verve Magazine or buy the Verve issue on stands now!
|
|
||||||||
|
|||||||||
| Home | Subscribe to Verve | Cover Gallery | Advertisers | About Verve | Contact Us | |
| © Verve Magazine. Please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use |