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HOME | LIFE/STYLE | SPECIAL |
April 3, 1997 |
![]() The silence that speaksShobha Warrier in MadrasIt is a common enough sight in all the major book shops of the city - a simple poster of a mother and child, and impressed onlookers milling around it. The poster has been signed by P C Sriram, one of India's most acclaimed cinematographers (Agninakshatram, Nayakan, Anjali). But it isn't the signature that attracts the crowd. It's the disturbing quality of the picture, the powerful emotions it conveys and the many questions it throws up.
''Me, an optimist?" The raised eyebrows signal serious doubt. "I don't think so. And no, today is not always dark. Except for the common man who has been denied the opportunity to own and enjoy any form of art. We have confined art and music to the upper strata of society." Art, he holds, especially his art, should be available to everyone. Which is why he has priced his now-famous poster at just Rs 400. ''People tell me that my image will suffer because of this. I think that's pure nonsense!" he grins.
Posters, obviously, are his latest passion. ''Unlike other countries, art in poster form is not very popular in India," he says matter-of-factly. "So I tried to think from an average Indian's point of view. What would make him buy a poster? A kid, of course! See, everybody is a kid at heart. I also wanted to give warmth to the picture. And what other better way than have a mother in it?"
It was then that he came across an old pile of still photographs which he had snapped over the years. Many were damaged. And, as he worked at restoring them, he was mesmerised by the appeal of those photographs. So, for the next 15 days, he spread the huge prints in his room and scrutinised them in detail. ''As far as art is concerned," says Sriram, "mental exercise is not a favourite pastime of us Indians. So I chose only those 19 photographs which, I felt, would make direct contact with the people and their lives." The mother and child picture, now such a rage all over Madras, is the first of these. The rest are on exhibition in Madras. Sriram's flirtation with the camera began a long time ago. It started with a Brownie camera his grandfather gifted him when he was just nine. "And my very first trial with it," Sriram says, "was disastrous." After shooting various nature scenes in Cubbon Park (Bangalore, where his family was located then), he opened the camera and took out the film.
Soon, though, it was people, in their varied moods, life styles and expressions, that appealed to him more than nature. His passion to register on film everything that caught his eye took him to the Pune Film Institute. "My years there provided me with an opportunity to see some of the greatest cinematic works in the world, created by the greatest masters of all time," he says. What does Sriram feel about cinematography dominating other aspects of film-making in south Indian cinema? For instance, about the beautiful picture postcard shots which often distracted the viewer from the storyline.
Despite his hectic cinematic schedule, Sriram has made it a point to be in constant touch with his still camera. ''I grew up on still photography," he affirms, "I identify the world through it." For the still camera, and the 'reality' he snaps with it, is Sriram's way of compensating for the fantasy he creates on screen. P C Sriram's photograph: Sanjay Ghosh
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