INTIMATIONS OF INTIMACY
Art India|April 2023
Sunil Gupta shares his journey with Gautami Reddy.
Gautami Reddy
INTIMATIONS OF INTIMACY

Last year, during the rains, Sunil Gupta greeted us at the entrance of Delhi’s Vadehra Art Gallery – a group of artists, students and photography enthusiasts including myself – as we gathered around for a special tour of an exhibition that spanned four decades of his life.

Nearing 70, he was wearing a crisp white shirt, striped pants and half a smile. “Welcome,” he said, as he led us into a room of large black-and-white photographs taken in the 1980s – from a series titled Cruising after which the exhibition took its name – it paid homage to his experiences as a young gay man coming into his own almost six decades ago in the 1960s in New Delhi.

“Here’s a photograph of the house I grew up in… B-41, Nizamuddin East,” he said pointing to what could be his heart’s permanent address, “and a walk from there was Humayun’s Tomb which I discovered was a cruising ground for many like me.” For Gupta, ‘many like me’ meant young gay men – shy and unassuming, lost and self-searching – for whom off-the-grid sites such as the medieval ruins and tombs of Delhi had become a place of gathering, sexual awakening and expression.

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