Opening: 20 June, Thursday 6:00 pm, Hírös Agora / Chamber Room
Opening speech by: Baghet Iskander photographer
Open for the duration of the festival: 10:00 am – 6:00 pm.
On 22 June, the Night of Museums the exhibition will be open until midnight.
In 2011, adhering to his mentor Henri Cartier Breson’s mantra to „photograph the truth”, animation filmmaker Ishu Patel embarked on a photographic journey in South East Asia. Abandoning moving images to secure a series of small images that capture a uniquely human gesture or powerful thought-provoking story, he plowed both urban and rural areas armed with Digital Leica M9.
The result is a collection of elusive still images, photographs that tell a story, seize a moment in life or rare a witness to joy, struggle or human dignity. Even though globalization has transformed Asia at an unprecedented rate, millions still continue to labour in traditional informal economies. Their daily routine is fixed in time. They keep the process of life in constant motion. They endure, survive, abide, and sustain. When left their own devices these communties are robust, but are fragile when confronted by mega projects such as one that may dam a river, flood a valley, mine a mountaintop, or simply remove a jetty.
Ishu Patel |
After his university education Ishu Patel got a lifetime opportunity to assist Henri Cartier-Bresson on a photographic journey through the Indian states of Gujarat and Rajasthan. The experience had a progound effect on him and he never forgot the master’s speech at a press conference before hundreds of local press photographers, where he raised his Leica up in the air and advised „photograph the truth”. Ever since he has referred to those words in all his creative work. For him, the truth opens up the creative process.
During his subsequent career as an Animation Filmmaker at the National Film Board of Canada, he was occupied with thousands of moving images. In animated film, individual images are not so important, but the changes that happen between two images is crucial, thereby creating a motion, the essential element of storytelling. In photography it is the opposite: a moment of creation occurs in a fraction of a second when a shutter is pressed and motion is frozen and this is why the power of photographic images continue to stand it’s own.
Never political or judgmental, this photography exhibition comprises Patels’s homage to the unsung lives of ordinary Asians, many of whom are increasingly overlooked in a fast-changing world.