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In the Heart of the Dark Night

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July - August 2016

A conservationist and keen observer of the animal world, George Shiras III was a pioneer in the field of wildlife photography. His astonishing flash photographs revealed for the first time the mysterious world of the forest at night. For more than 60 consecutive years he probed the forested shores of the same wilderness lake in upper Michigan in search of images unlike any ever seen before.

- Geoffrey C. Ward

In the Heart of the Dark Night

These days, everyone’s a wildlife photographer, or thinks they are. Last autumn, driving in a jeep through Ranthambhore in hopes of spotting one of the tigers that have made that National Park the world’s best-known spot for encountering the great cats in the wild, we came around a bend and braked to a stop. The road ahead was blocked by a big roofless canter. Twenty tourists from Tokyo were aboard, all wearing floppy white hats and identical masks against the dust, listening attentively to a khaki-clad guide. When he pointed into the forest where a single langur monkey sat on a branch, scratching himself, all twenty passengers rose from their seats as one, raised their iPads above their heads and pressed the button. Then they sat down again as the canter moved off toward another tree in which a suitably photogenic owlet was already known to be dozing. There has always been a world of difference between the wildlife snapshots we casual tourists take to preserve memories and impress our friends and the infinitely patient, painstaking work of those who devote their lives to capturing worlds into which the rest of us can venture only tentatively. Consider the important but largely forgotten work of George Shiras III. Born in Pennsylvania in 1859, the son of an Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, he was a lawyer and also a sometime Republican politician. He’d also been an enthusiastic hunter since boyhood and began trying to photograph animals in 1899, simply as a way to enjoy the forests around Lake Superior in the o

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Creative Image

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Passport Alexandr Chekmenev

When I witnessed how people were living out the final years of their lives, it made a very strong impression on me. I remember a blind woman. I did not know that she was blind, so I asked her to look into the camera, but she said that she could not see. I thought why would a blind person need a passport? She did not have too much time left anyway.

time to read

2 mins

March - April 2017

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Female Portraiture In Iran Parisa Damandan

Parisa Damandan remembers her portraits taken as a young girl at a local studio in Isfahan. They were snapshots of a small, shorthaired schoolgirl in uniform turning into a young girl with long straight hair and finally into one on the threshold of womanhood. Later in 1978, Iran’s new political regime swept away existing institutions and put in place harsh laws.

time to read

3 mins

March - April 2017

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Matheran Green Festival

A community of people geared towards revolutionising the way we live, work, play, and learn came together to organise a festival dedicated to leading greener lives. The festival aimed to encourage an eco-friendly way of living and conservation of nature and hoped to promote a healthy and self-sustainable lifestyle.  

time to read

2 mins

July - August 2016

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Russian Religious Pilgrimage Early 1900s

Throughout revolutions that made history and the ones that continue to shape today’s world, photography has provided understanding of the dynamic nuances that make a nation. Similarly, to the transmutation of the political, industrial, and religious scenario in 19th century Russia, photography acted as an important medium in documenting the unrest.

time to read

4 mins

January/February 2017

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Altaf Qadri Kashmir The Bleeding Paradise

Being an insider, Altaf Qadri’s photographs of the Kashmir conflict are hard hitting, evocative and unapologetic. Yet they are personal, flawed and have an air of intimacy to them. It is this alienated sense of intimacy that makes his photographs transcend the violence depicted in them, into a space where empathy resides. Through his documentation, Altaf seeks to create a channel for an open and fair dialogue that lies beyond accusations and finger pointing. From his photographs, it is clear that violence can only ever beget violence; hate can only ever beget hate. It does not matter which side you are on, his photographs will move you enough to reflect, question the mindless violence at various levels, especially the infiltration from other side of Kashmir and the support of Pakistan’s ISI for the conflict to go on and for inflicting more deaths to isolate the local people who have populated the valley since 1989.

time to read

8 mins

September/October 2016

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Rumoured in Branches

Artist and art critic Rollie Mukherjee is a non-muslim, non-Kashmiri based in Baroda, Gujarat. Her concern and urge to communicate the sufferings and pain of the Kashmiris were ignited by the stories shared by the few Kashmiris who used to come to her house frequently in the 90s to sell warm dresses and carpets. The memories of these stories stuck with her and would revisit whenever she read or watched something related to Kashmir. Unfortunately, events of the last one month have taken the situation to its painful limits in Kashmir. Here is what she shares with Creative Image.

time to read

1 mins

September/October 2016

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Photo 'Ok' Please

If there has been one major shift in photography over the past few years, it is the advent of the cellphone camera. Even the cheapest of smartphones today pay extra attention to the quality of images that their devices can produce. Never has a camera been so portable and so affordable. Never has an entire generation been so vocal. In every sense of the term, photography has never been so democratic in its entire history. More photographs are made today on a daily basis than ever before.

time to read

2 mins

January/February 2017

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Waking From Dreams Of India

Neil Chowdhury was born in England to an Indian father and British mother. After earning his MFA from the University of Washington in Seattle, he was able to amass the funds needed for a plane ticket to pursue his explorations of his father’s homeland.“Photography for me is the perfect instrument of social observation. The reasons I began photographing have to do with the medium’s ability to record, describe, and provide a reference for the analysis of what has been seen. I used this at first as a way of finding and understanding social interaction, and then as a way of continued investigation of other societies, and as a creative strategy of art making,” he says.

time to read

2 mins

January/February 2017

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Capturing World War II-Dmitri Baltermants

In 1962, Andrei Tarkovsky, the iconic Russian director, made a film called Ivan’s Childhood, a masterpiece that remarkably depicted conflict. The actual act of fighting was realised in its aftermath—by way of visuals of desolate landscapes and grim, darkly lit scenes. When watching the film closely, it is hard not to be reminded of the great photographer Dmitri Baltermants’ work. Though many of us continue to consider him as one of the greatest war photographers of all time, and some would say even better than Robert Capa, but unfortunately, the bias in the Western world, and especially in America, makes it all the more rare to get recognised on the basis of quality of your work and the creative explorations you make.

time to read

4 mins

September/October 2016

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Majid Saeedi Afghanistan The Conflict Within

Afghanistan–The land of the Kabuliwala! A land defined by and defining etiquette, with a rich and powerful culture where poetry and music comes alive–such was my introduction to the mystical land of Afghanistan. The Afghanistan of today, however, is entirely different. The beautiful people, mountains and the poetry still linger, but are marred with blood, dust and war. Majid Saeedi is an Iranian documentary photographer who has been covering conflict areas in the middle-east for more than two decades now.

time to read

2 mins

September/October 2016

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