Photographer - Salik Ahmad - Captioned: 90-year-old Kajodi trudges home 400 km away amid coronavirus lockdown. Published in - https://www.outlookindia.com/website/story/india-news-90-year-old-kajodi-trudges-home-400-km-away-amid-coronavirus-lockdown/349525
Many years ago, the Wanted Series initiated the dialogue on ethics in photography. A seminar was organised at Max Muller Bhavan Delhi in collaboration with Goa-Cap and Askar. Subsequently, the Goethe Institute at New Delhi tried to formulate a working group which would explore the question of Ethics in photographic practices. A large seminar was followed by a couple of close think-thank meeting, and then we all disappeared. Going back to the conversation that we generated, I remember being numbed by the impossibility of it all. Yet, ethics as praxis and as a concept metaphor has always remained important to me as a critical tool while looking at (looking through) any cultural act or artefact. In today's world, we can no longer hold on to the notion of a 'Universal Good'. Over the years my notions of ethics have been shaped by moral negotiation processes, red-flagging arbitrariness or manipulation.
Kevin Carter, 'The vulture and the Little Girl', first appeared in The New York Times on 26 March 1993. Image taken from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_vulture_and_the_little_girl
'The Vulture and the Little Girl' is perhaps one of the earliest instances in recent
memory which threw up grave questions regarding ethics in photojournalist
practices. Initially, Carter claimed to have come upon the scene,
snapped a few photos, and then chased the bird away.
"You won't believe what I've just shot! … I was shooting this kid on her knees, and then changed my angle, and suddenly there was this vulture right behind her! … And I just kept shooting – shot lots of films. Silva asked him where he shot the picture and was looking around to take a photo as well. Carter pointed to a place 50 m (160 ft) away. Then Carter told him that he had chased the vulture away. He told Silva he was shocked by the situation he had just photographed, saying, "I see all this, and all I can think of is Megan", his young daughter. " (https://joesackcom.wordpress.com/2019/08/01/the-vulture-and-the-child-what-happened-next/)
These were Carter's immediate words to his colleague João Silva, (a part of the Bang- Bang Club
specialising in reporting from conflict areas). However, Carter eventually admitted that he watched the scene for about
twenty minutes, waiting for the vulture to get closer to the boy and
hoping that it would spread its wings for a more dramatic photo. After the
vulture refused to move, Carter finally chased the bird away.
Salik Ahmad's ' 90-year-old Kajodi trudges
home 400 km away amid coronavirus lockdown' succeeded in spotlighting the
effect of CONVID lockdown on the migrant labourers of India, apart from photo narrating
plights of victims during the conflict, it also bears similarity to Carter's image
in the use of dramatic foreshortening and depth-of-field. There is one
crucial difference and this perhaps reflects the culture of consumption in our
times. The readers of Outlook and the online viewers of the image raised no
question regarding the fate of Kajodi. How did the photographer intervene in a
human capacity? Did he (even) offer her some water to drink? Has Kajodi reached
home?
Many years ago…in the early 90’s Cater and New York
times had to face these questions and these questions made the photographer and
publication realise that lines between being a photographer and being a human
being could not be blurred beyond a point. Carter’s eventual suicide about 5
years after taking the photograph should not be directly linked to the
psyco-emotional impact of 'The Vulture and the
Little Girl'. He had seen enough morbid violence and death
in South Africa and Sudan for any sensitive soul to be deeply affected.
Contrary to perception, photojournalism has an uneasy relationship with ‘truth’. The ‘girl’ from South Sudan
turned out to be a boy, and Carter framed the shot to maximise the impression
that this disaster was taking place in the ‘middle of nowhere’ where in reality
it was on a runway with her parents just a few minutes away in a place surrounded
by UN workers and journalists. In Salik
Ahmad's work, I do not know if her name is really Kajodi, is she really 90
years old? Is her village really 400 km away? Such details get lost in the spectacle
of a tragedy and conflict generates. In a way, way beyond truth, this is a
work in the politics of representation.
Photographers easily forget that their subject
matter is (at least) an equal collaborator in the economic and cultural capital
a picture produces. They also (always) forget that they are very much a part of
the frame, that they exist within the photograph and not outside it. If
political photography and photojournalism want to break through the structures
they critique, these realisations are important.
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Discover Rahul Bhattacharya, a design educator, theorist, and independent art historian who explores post-contemporary ethics and aesthetics. Through curation, writing, and workshops, he engages in critical discourse and promotes insightful perspectives on design and art. With a focus on ethics, aesthetics, and the intersection of various disciplines, Rahul Bhattacharya's work offers a fresh lens to the evolving landscape of design and art.
a change is just around the corner
///--->>>rethinking art, contemporaneity and (my)self
Works and Curations
Sunday, April 12, 2020
Coronavirus India | Has Kajodi Reached Home? | Our South Sudan Moment
Labels:
Coronavirus,
ethics,
Kajodi,
Kevin Carter,
photojournalism,
Representation,
Salik Ahmad
Deeply committed to social and ecological sustainability, and am a frugal innovation enthusiast. I am an educationist, art historian, and experience designer living between Gandhinagar and Kolkata. Currently Head of the MDes Integrated Programme Department at Unitedworld Institute of Design and Mentoring UX design and research and a design consultant.
I have extensively written about Contemporary Indian Art, Medieval Architecture and Interdisciplinary Design Practice. Mentored social innovation, and community interventions, curated for galley spaces and for large public-based festivals.
Ex Managing Editor of Art&Deal Magazine and the founding Conveyor MATI (Management of Art Treasures of India).
Brick layer+ Co-Founder of Kolkata International Performance Art Festival.
Since 2014 I have also been a part of the NINE Schools of Art collective working towards developing workshop-based teaching methods for art, design and creative theory.
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Always thought along similar lines, so I photograph nature:) Great writing Rahul. Raises a lot of questions.
ReplyDeleteHi,
Deletethanks ...would love to see your photographs :)
क्या कहानी की खुद की अपनी कोई फितरत होती है?क्या उसकी खुद की अपनीकोई ज़रुरत होती है?क्या किसी तस्वीर की खुद की अपनी कोई फितरत होती है?क्या उसकी खुद की भी अपनीकोई ज़रुरत होती है?
ReplyDeleteशायद यही की उन्हें लोग बस देख-सुनकर और दिखाएँ, सुनाएँ।
इस बीच मगर, जो सबसे बड़ा सर उठाता है वो है, इनसानी फितरत- 'मैं ने' कहा, 'मैं ने' बनाया, 'मैं ने' दिखाया, 'मुझे' देखो, 'मेरी' सुनो। इनसानी ज़रुरत अक्सर इस इर्द-गिर्द के शोर-बहस में खो जाती है।
किसी भी तमगे या लेबल के पहले हम इंसान हैं। लेबल को निभाने के पहले अपनी इंसानियत क्यों न निभाएं।
Very thought provoking work Rahul.
PS: Sorry, I tend to express about somethings better in Hindustaani.
Yes absolutely
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ReplyDeleteThis is a very good piece of writing Rahul. Like I told the students, a photo consists of three things, the photographer, the picture itself and the viewers interpretation. There is nothing which is candid. Everything is staged.
DeleteThanks Honey...most people dont see the photographer in the photo.
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