Making an Inclusive Mountain

Project 365 - A Collective Public Photo-Art Initiative

By Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Architecture around Tiruvannmalai | Biju Ibrahim (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Photography was introduced to India soon after its invention, although the exact history of its arrival is still obscure. As early as January 1840, Thacker and Company of Calcutta were importing daguerreotype cameras and advertising them in the daily, Friend of India.Photography arrived in India as a novelty – as a “toy”, marketed as the “new art of sun drawing”. The first commercial photographer to open a photography studio was FSchranhofer, who set up a Calotype studio at 2 Kyd Street, Calcutta in 1849. Daguerreotype studios came up shortly thereafter, in 1850, in Bombay, and then in Calcutta, in 1852. Although the Daguerreotypes persisted through the 1850’s and early 1860’s, they gave way to the Calotype establishments.

Chronicles of Tiruvannamalai | Abul Kalam Azad (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

The European market at the time was captivated by a sense of conspicuous consumption – buying of commodities that had an exotic flavor. The introduction of photography, was informed to a major part by this sense – borne out of the resident Europeans’ desire to keep up with the “trends” of an exotic land, and the consumer market’s need to offer novelties to stay ahead of the competition.

Chronicles of Tiruvannamalai | Abul Kalam Azad (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Chronicles of Tiruvannamalai | Abul Kalam Azad (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Chronicles of Tiruvannamalai | Abul Kalam Azad (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Chronicles of Tiruvannamalai | Abul Kalam Azad (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Tiruvannamalai is an ancient nature worship site, situated in the Bangalore–Pondy Highway, Tamil Nadu. Experiments done by Geological Survey of India has revealed that the charnockite rock which makes up the Annamalai hill in Tiruvannamalai is older than 3.5 billion years and believed to have formed as a result of a massive volcanic eruption. The fertile land around the hill was highly potent for farming and soon became an important human settlement in South India.

365 Days Myopic View | Abul Kalam Azad (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

During the Sangam/Classical period (3rd century BCE to 3rd century CE), Buddhism and Jainism were the most prominent philosophies in South India and during that time, Tiruvannamalai became one of the important centers for Jain culture and learning. Later, many a legends and mythical stories of Tamil Saiva lore grew around the Annamalai Hill and it came to be revered as “Agni” (fire), one of the panchabhootas (five elements).

365 Days Myopic View | Abul Kalam Azad (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

365 Days Myopic View | Abul Kalam Azad (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Substantial historical records of this town are available from the 9th century CE, mainly from Chola inscriptions in the Annamalaiyar temple of Tiruvannamalai. Further inscriptions made before ninth century, found scattered around the small town, indicate the rule of Pallava kings, whose capital was Kanchipuram. The seventh century saint poets Sambandar, Appar and Manickavacakar wrote of the temple in their poetic works. The Chola Kings ruled over the region for more than four centuries, from 850 to 1280, and were temple patrons.

Colors of Tiruvannamalai | Dinesh Khanna (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Colors of Tiruvannamalai | Dinesh Khanna (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

The inscriptions from the Chola king record various gifts like land, sheep, cow and oil to the temple commemorating various victories of the dynasty. The Annamalaiyar temple is nothing short of an architectural marvel, encompassing a wide array of iconographic styles and techniques.

Colors of Tiruvannamalai | Dinesh Khanna (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Colors of Tiruvannamalai | Dinesh Khanna (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Colors of Tiruvannamalai | Dinesh Khanna (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Archeological Mapping of Tiruvannamalai | RR Srinivasan (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

The Annamalaiyar temple is one of the largest Shiva temple complexes in India, spanning over 25 acres. There are no concise written records indicating the exact time period when the earliest structures of Annamalaiyar temple were erected. The modern temple complex is a result of constructions carried out by successive dynasties of Kings over many centuries – especially the post-Sangam period Chola dynasties (9th century CE), and later expanded by the Sangama dynasty, who ruled Vijayanagara (1336-1485 CE), the Saluva dynasty, and the Tuluva dynasty (1491-1570 CE), and Tanjore Nayaks.

Archeological Mapping of Tiruvannamalai | RR Srinivasan (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Archeological Mapping of Tiruvannamalai | RR Srinivasan (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Untitled - Finding the Poetic Document | Waswo X Waswo (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

In the 17th century, Tiruvannamalai town and the temple came under the stewardship of the Nawab of Carnatic (Arcot), a vassal of the Nizam of Hyderabad. After 1753, the town came into the domain of Europeans, with the French occupying it in 1757, and then the British in 1760 until Tipu Sultan annexed the territory in 1790. It finally fell back into British hands in the early 19th century.

Untitled - Finding the Poetic Document | Waswo X Waswo (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Around the Hill | Thierry Cardon (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Around the Hill | Thierry Cardon (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Photographs of Tiruvannamalai dates back as far as the 1880’s – quite possibly as part of the colonial drive to document and preserve India’s monuments and historical sites that was initiated post the 1857 uprising. These images were focused on the architecture of the Annamalaiyar temple. Very few images and even lesser information about the men behind the images are available from this period.

Around the Hill | Thierry Cardon (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Untitled | Ramu Aravindan (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

The “second phase” of photographic history of Tiruvannamalai came about with the emergence of another pivot, who is perhaps today more famous than the Annamalaiyar temple –the presence of RamanaMaharshi in the archives of photographic images of Tiruvannamalai is, in a word, overbearing. Photographers who had visited Tiruvannamalai in Ramana’s time have left behind a rich catalogue of visuals, including Indian photographers like PRS Mani Iyer (who had worked in Modern Theatre of Salem as an executive photographer), Dr.TN Krishnaswamy, and G Govind Welling.

Untitled | Ramu Aravindan (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Untitled Photographs | Shibu Arakkal (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Untitled Photographs | Shibu Arakkal (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

PRS. Mani’s most famous photo of Sri Ramana titled ‘Mani bust’ (1917-1922) has been circulated and worshipped in South India and abroad since late 1930s. Amateur photographer Dr.TN Krishanswamy first visited Tiruvannamalai when he was a medical student. The photograph he took of Ramana enchanted the people living in the Ramanashram so much so that he was invited back to become the “official” photographer of the ashram.

Children of Different Gods | Ami Gupta (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Over the years, Krishnaswamy produced a comprehensive collection of photographs pertaining to Ramana, the ashram, and the temple – almost 85% of the images in the Ramanashram archives is attributed to Dr.TN Krishnaswamy (shot between the 1930’s to 1950). GGovind Welling was a professional photographer, and renowned camera maker who owned a photography requisitions store in Bangalore (which is still operational today). The Welling bust, taken in 1946, depicts Ramana in a sort of “ethereal” glow.

Children of Different Gods | Ami Gupta (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Children of Different Gods | Ami Gupta (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Children of Different Gods | Ami Gupta (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

It is claimed to have been shot in the moonlight, and the story that is attached to it goes that when Ramana, who was a keen observer of photography and its process, asked about the lighting, Welling is famously said to have replied: “Bhagavan, you are the light!”. Welling only visited Tiruvannamalai that one time, for a span of 3 days.

Photo Seva | Varun Gupta (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Architecture around Tiruvannmalai | Biju Ibrahim (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

The town’s international fame is partly due to the images created by the American photo-journalist Eliot Elisofon, which were published in Life magazine (a photojournalism weekly news magazine, owned by TIME), and later, the iconic Henri Cartier-Bresson published in Magnum. Eliot Elisofon’s assignment in India in the late 1940’s, was to depict the art and ancient rock-cut architecture of Hindu and Buddhist temples at various locations in India, including Arunachaleshwarar (Annamalaiyar) temple in Tiruvannamalai.

Architecture around Tiruvannmalai | Biju Ibrahim (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Initially tempted to meet Sri Aurobindo, who was living the life of a hermit, hardly meeting anybody or appearing in public, other than to give ‘darshan’ once every four months, Elisofon was informed of an “equally famous” holy man in Tiruvannamalai – a man who, according to his followers, piloted the global destiny through his meditative prowess; a feat that was claimed, by hisfollowers, of Sri Aurobindo as well. Elisofonmade several photographs of Tiruvannamalai, the Annamalaiyar Temple and Sri Ramana at his Ashram.

Architecture around Tiruvannmalai | Biju Ibrahim (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Architecture around Tiruvannmalai | Biju Ibrahim (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

360 Degrees Annamalai Hill | Jiby Charles (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

His photographs on Tiruvannamalai was published on 30th May 1949, the article was titled “Holy Man”, written by Winthrop Sargeant - senior writer for Life. The article drew a huge amount of attention to Ramana and the ashram, which became the focus of Tiruvannamalai, and also indirectly precipitated the visit of Henri Cartier-Bresson.

360 Degrees Annamalai Hill | Jiby Charles (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Cartier-Bresson’s images of Tiruvannamalai are not devoid of the typical representations of the “exotic” that is all too familiar in the colonial projects. His contributions to the medium of photography notwithstanding, Bresson’s agenda in India was straightforward – making saleable photographic prints of the subcontinent, its culture, and people;and this attitude is quite apparent in his negotiations with the ashram regarding the prints he had produced.

360 Degrees Annamalai Hill | Jiby Charles (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

After long negotiations, Bresson bequeathed a few prints to the ashram – which remain a proud acquisition, and has been extensively reproduced for commercial use. Bresson’s documentation of the death of Ramana is a reflection of how the west was seeing its colonies – naive and fantastical. Interestingly, Bresson also claimed in various instances that he saw a “ball of fire” slowly move across the sky and come to rest on the Annamalai hill, shortly after Ramana’s passing.

360 Degrees Annamalai Hill | Jiby Charles (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Religion, Politics and Cinema | Seema Krishnakumar (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

To this day, Tiruvannamalai’s identity is tied to Ramana through the photographs of PRS Mani, G GWelling, Dr.TN Krishnaswamy, Eliot Elisofon, and Henri Cartier-Bresson. When interviewed in the 1960’s Dr. TN Krishnaswamy, in response to being asked how he felt when he first saw the Maharshi, said that the Maharshi did not seem to take notice of anything around him, and that his eyes were “shining” and there was something “divine” about his countenance.

Religion, Politics and Cinema | Seema Krishnakumar (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Inasmuch, every photographer that ever visited Tiruvannamalai never took notice about anything other than Ramana and the Annamalaiyar temple – their eyes glossing over everything else and their focus devoted entirely to the two ‘divine’ icons. But, there remains a Tiruvannamalai beyond, which has gone unnoticed and undocumented – invisible to the colonial gaze that is pre-occupied with its exotic fairytales, and underwhelming for the photojournalist due to its perceived mundane-ness.

Religion, Politics and Cinema | Seema Krishnakumar (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

If there were any attempts to the contrary, the conspicuous nature of the Ramanashram archives and its fixation with the Sage has made such documents all but indiscernible or lost. This attitude is curiously reminiscent of the colonial projects of British India – where the Company held control over how the world saw this land.

The colonial photography projects were backed by powerful commercial imperatives when they were beginning to be commissioned by the mid-1850’s – the new dominion had to be projected to investors in Britain as a land worthy of their investment.

Religion, Politics and Cinema | Seema Krishnakumar (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

House of Devotion | Bhagyashri Patki (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Their prominence in history is perhaps an ode to the success of their archival preservation. The photography projects initiated and archived by the colonial government was their epistemological master plan for India. The sheer scale of the colonial archives and the commissioned projects preserved therein, served to canonize the colonial state’s narrative of India and its people to itself. The photographs of Captain Linnaeus Tripe of South India (1857-58), were perhaps a comprehensive virtual tour offered to the British audience of a foreign land.

House of Devotion | Bhagyashri Patki (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

In 1863, John and James Nicholas, who together were known as the Nicholas Brothers, Photographers of Madras, established a studio and concentrated on the South Indian landscape. They produced such works as “Madura, No. 6. A Passage in the Temple”, and “Seringapatam: Mausoleum Erected Over Tippoo Sultan and Haider Ali”.

The representation of the natives were non-existent in such collections - as far as the Empire was concerned, they were primitive barbarians. This view was further endorsed by Max Muller, and ‘studies’ were carried out in this regard to better ‘catalogue’ the primitives.

Folklore Medicine and Indigenous Practitioners | Venkatesan Perumal (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Folklore Medicine and Indigenous Practitioners | Venkatesan Perumal (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Folklore Medicine and Indigenous Practitioners | Venkatesan Perumal (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Deepam | Jiby Charles (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

“The Castes and Tribes of South India”, a sevenvolume ‘anthropological study’, carried out by the Edgar Thurston and K Rangachari in 1909, was intended to be an encyclopedia of sorts of the social groups living inthe Madras Presidency and the erstwhile princely states of Travancore, Mysore, Coorg, and Puddokottai, with a discussion on prevailing theories of anthropometry and craniometry – the basis for their perceived ‘superiority’.

Living Rooms | Arnav Rastogi (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

It was an attempt to collate information and produce an ‘ethnographic’ portrait of the people by providing descriptions of their physiognomy, rituals, religious beliefs, social traditions, and communal practices. These projects denied the colonized natives the right to privacy and that of self-representation – since the visuals were being constructed from a stance of perceived ‘superiority’.

Living Rooms | Arnav Rastogi (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Outside the realm of official photography, commissioned directly by the Crown, commercial and personal archives were producing a parallel narrative. Photographers like Felix Beato, whose documentation of the carnage immediately after the 1857 mutiny in pictures of unearthed bones and hung rebels, in Walter Benjamin’s terms, paint a “phantasmagoric aesthetic” – through which it perceptually alienates the colonials and the colonized and justifies the ideology of the colonial state’s civilizing mission.

Ethnic Attire and Fashion | Panneer Selvam (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Visuals of a Transcending Dream | Shiv Kiran (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

These histories of documentation have consciously or unconsciously warped the nature of photographic representation – even if we are talking about a tiny temple-town.

Sufism in Temple Town | Iqbal MK (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Christianity in Temple Town | Leo James (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Contemporary photographic image-making is slowly evolving out of this shell of quasi-superior nature. The works produced in EtP’s pilot photo-art project, Project365 Tiruvannamalai, was an attempt to enable the visual recording of this small temple-town by de-locating the photographic gaze from that of an occidental perspective ‘studying’ its subjects with alienation and disengagement insofar as to only confirm the pre-conceived ideas/notions about them, to that of an engaged artist who is in a dialogue with the subject and acknowledges their right to represent themselves.

Christianity in Temple Town | Leo James (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Tamil Christian Couples in Temple Town | Leo James (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

The project has been undertaken at a paradigm shift moment, when the impact of globalization and technological advancements is fast changing the contours of contemporary life, lifestyle and people. Even though photography has pervaded every corridor of human life, very few images are available in the public domain and out of the one lakh photographs taken, on average, only one is being printed and preserved for posterity.

Tamil Christian Couples in Temple Town | Leo James (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Besides, in the digital era, there is an overflow of information, as well as a lack of focused effort that systematically documents and archives the everyday scenario – the mundane life that is infused with cultural symbols.

Inner and Outer Path | Maveeran Somasundaram (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Project 365Tiruvannamalai was led by contemporary Indian photographer AbulKalam Azad. He has contributed the major part of the three thousand and odd photographs that are part of the public archive. The contributors include RRSrinivasan, Dinesh Khanna, Waswo XWaswo, Thierry Cardon, RamuAravindan, ShibuArakkal, BhagyashriPatki, Anurag Sharma, Ami Gupta, ArnavRastogi, Shiv Kiran, Leo James, J Jayaraman, PanneerSelvam, Biju Ibrahim, RadhiJangla, Jiby Charles, P VenkatesanPerumal, Varun Gupta, SeemaKrishnakumar, Iqbal M K, MaveeranSomasundaram and Boney KR.

Coloured houses in Agni Shylum | Radhi Jangla (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Each project photographer worked on his/her own individual photo project, using their own medium of choice – from smartphones, 35mm, digital cameras, traditional cameras - providing a comprehensive view of contemporary Tiruvannamalai. The strength of the project is the collective consciousness generated by the team, which is made of individuals who come from diversified cultures, languages, experiences, exposures, and interests. As a collective, they weave a comprehensive visual narrative, which can only be perceived when seen as a whole.

360 Degrees Annamalai Hill | Jiby Charles (2014-2015)Ekalokam Trust for Photography

Credits: Story

EtP Project 365 Team Photographers
Abul Kalam Azad, Director
R. R. Srinivasan
Dinesh Khanna
Waswo X. Waswo
Thierry Cardon
Ramu Aravindan
Shibu Arakkal
Bhagyashri Patki
Anurag Sharma
Ami Gupta
Arnav Rastogi
Shiv Kiran
Leo James
J Jayaraman
Panneer Selvam
Biju Ibrahim
Radhi Jangla
Jiby Charles
Venkatean Perumal
Varun Gupta
Seema Krishnakumar
Iqbal M. K.
Maveeran Somasundaram
Boney KR.

Project Initiated By:
Ekalokam Trust for Photography (EtP)

Curated By:
Tulsi Swarna Lakshmi, Curator, EtP
Gautham Ramachandran, Associate Curator, EtP
Arjun Ramachandran, Associate Curator, EtP

Text By:
Gautham Ramachandran

'Making of an Inclusive Mountain' first coined by Waswo X Waswo

Special Thanks To:
Victoria Memorial Hall, India
RAZA Foundation
Sri J Jayaraman
Shaji N Jaleel, Videographer

To know more about out initiatives, please see www.etpindia.org

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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