|
A
seasoned photographer known as much for his intriguing fashion shoots
as his incisive photojournalism, Arif Mahmood engages the onlooker
on a psychological plane to drive home his point of view. His latest
exhibition, Multiple Spaces, at Canvas capitalises on the impact
of instant contact to draw in the viewer. He has effectively played
with dramatic subjective content to evoke several levels of viewing
a single shot. Using his uncanny ability to perceive and capture
what is beyond the apparent, he transforms his images of ordinary
souls caught in the grind of life, into complex docudramas of humanity
in the grip of social and cultural constraints.
Effective
street photography is about telling a story in a single frame, not
simply recording what was there at a particular time and in a specific
place. People's expressions are fleeting and a situation's compositional
opportunities are always in a state of flux. Catching the right
moment, particularly when there is more than one person in the frame,
is just as difficult as a sports photographer's job in terms of
catching the moment of peak action. Arif Mahmood shoots with the
adroitness and concentration of one who has an intuition of what
is about to unfold. His images hinge on what is transpiring. It
is this quizzical moment of a 'happening' that draws the viewer
to his compositions, and "a story within a tale" begins
to unfold.
Using
the power of street photography to explore the human condition,
Mahmood focuses on subjects caught unawares - he clicks the natural
expression or the usual environment but it is his juxtaposition
of opposing, contemplative or conflicting attitudes and situations
that compounds the single image into multiple spaces. His portrayal
of the real and the ordinary is charged with subtleties that reflect
societal anomalies and disparities. The sadness hidden in the happy
smile, modern architecture at variance with urban detritus, grills
concealing yet revealing censorious pleasures, aging edifices tacky
and worn but still standing tall. Particularly poignant are the
indecisive expressions of people, faltering and uncertain, lost
and shaky or just resigned. Are they victims of circumstances -
just cogs in the massive wheel of life - or a forgotten humanity
left to fend for themselves as best they can?
In
this particular exhibition, the photographer invokes a world within
a world through intelligent use of reflections on various transparent
surfaces. Culturally multipart, complex, grimy, shabby or busy street
surroundings manifest on a car window, rear view reflector, in a
water puddle, through a broken pane, in a looking glass, a wayside
barber's mirror or through a microscope lens and present the onlooker
with skewered images of a third world city. Fragmented views seen
through shards of broken glass and the kaleidoscopic mosaic intensify
the off-centre stance. It is perhaps the photographer's intention
to portray man in a world gone awry. Multiple Spaces is full of
individual anecdotes within complex narratives and demands extended
engagement to be understood in context.
Street
photography is a subset of documentary photography. It is based
on scenes from everyday life of its subjects, and other than shots
of streets, it may also focus on markets, bazaars, religious festivals
or any other urban centre or celebration. Street photography often
has a social or political message and it tends to centre more on
an ironic statement relating to its subject directly, instead of
commenting on all similar subjects. Essentially, the intent of street
photography is to function as a mirror that reflects its immediate
subject. While it may seem counter-intuitive, black and white prints
tend to be the main medium of street photography; by eliminating
colour, the photographer pulls the viewer's focus into the action
or onto his subjects, preventing distraction from garish colour.
|