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ARUNIKA by Simon Wheatley

Delhi Photo Festival 2015

Delhi Photo Festival

Delhi Photo Festival
New Delhi, India

In 2008 Simon Wheatley, seeking his Bengali ancestry and with an interest in yogic philosophies, met a girl at a Calcutta ashram who had come from Nagaland with her family for an annual festival. Eighteen months later they married in a simple ceremony conducted by a monk who had initiated him into the tantric tradition his wife was born into. ! ! When their daughter was born in 2011, he found himself in the northeastern town of Dimapur and began photographing with real enthusiasm for the first time in India. A year later he returned to Dimapur from some time in Hong Kong and China to feel principles encountered through a study of Tai Chi affecting his approach to photography. Previously he had relied on hard-won access to difficult subject matter, but in Dimapur he wandered randomly with the Taoist ideal of flowing like water, avoiding any resistances, chasing the light to wherever it seemed he was meant to be.! !This approach has resulted in pictures of myriad situations, some indicating that he is still drawn to society’s edges. ’Arunika’ is a combination of tenderness at home and a reflection of concern at the world he has brought a daughter into.

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  • Title: ARUNIKA by Simon Wheatley
  • Creator: Delhi Photo Festival 2015
  • Photographer: Simon Wheatley
  • About the Photographer: Simon Wheatley (8 December 1970) was born in Singapore, educated in England and became a photographer wandering around Budapest. His book ‘Don’t Call MeUrban! The Time of Grime’ - an account of London’s inner-city youth crisis and their music - went to no.1 in the pop-cultural charts on amazon.com upon its 2011release. He was Leica’s ambassador for the launch of the digital M-series camera in2006.
  • #DPF2015: The image featured here is from the above-mentioned work that will be shown at the Delhi Photo Festival 2015 from October 30 to November 8, 2015 at the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA), CV Mess, Janpath, New Delhi.
Delhi Photo Festival

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