Sheetal Mallar finds her subjects in varied locales, each suggestive of the seesaw between buoyant dream and gritty actuality, a glittering past and a bleak future. Mallar crafts her pictorial narrative through a poetics of allusion, working with asides, stories told sotto voce, intriguing traces. In the process, she explores the sets of a noir thriller that recreates World War II Calcutta, its compositions of violence and its behind-the-scenes levity. She traverses the ruins of a fire-ravaged film studio, with decades’ worth of memorabilia charred, blowing in the wind. Discreetly, she enters video parlours that cater to a shifting, or drifting, population of workers fresh from villages and small towns, holding on to fantasy even as the protocols of labour grind them down. Mallar’s camera glides through the home of a family that specialised in producing horror movies, their everyday domestic reality as much a homage to the spectral and the grotesque as their scenography had been. It pauses among the rows of jaunty, flamboyant, sometimes legendary, sometimes dated outfits hanging in a store that is famous for supplying costumes to the theatre and the movies. The photographer traces, without intruding upon them, the lives of movie extras: the popular Hindi cinema’s ‘junior artistes’, condemned to haunt a marginal zone between expectation and achievement. Beneath these outward and visible subjects — ephemeral spaces and evanescent trades, aftermaths and afterlives — Mallar’s constant theme is transience. Encountering her protagonists, we recognise them, as well as ourselves, to be transients: creatures of passage afforded a brief leasehold by the cycle of time.
Esta historia es de la edición January 2020 de Domus India.
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Esta historia es de la edición January 2020 de Domus India.
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