Soumya Sankar Bose

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Soumya Sankar Bose
Born1990
Midnapore, India
OccupationPhotographer
Years active2010-present
Known forPortrait, Documentary photography
Notable work
  • The Former Heroes of Jatra [1]
  • Full Moon On a Dark night [2]
Awards
  • The Louis Roederer Discovery Public Award, Rencontres d'Arles 2023 [3]
  • Magnum Foundation's Migration and Religion Grant [4]
  • India Foundation For the Arts Grant 2015 & 17 [5]
  • HELLO! India Art Award 2023 [6]
Website www.soumyasankarbose.in

Soumya Sankar Bose is an Indian documentary photographer. In his practice he uses photography, archival material and text to explore desire, identity and memory. [7] His first book 'Where the Birds Never Sing(2020)' is on Marichjhapi massacre, the forcible eviction in 1979 of lower caste Bengali refugees on Marichjhapi Island in Sundarban, India, and the subsequent death of thousands by police gunfire, starvation, and disease. [8] The Book was shortlisted for the First Photobook award in the Paris Photo–Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards 2020. Soumya Sanker Bose was awarded Magnum Foundation's Social Justice Fellowship for Full Moon on a Dark Night in 2017, was Hello! India's Emerging Artist of the Year in 2023, and received the Louis Roederer Discovery Public Award at Les Rencontres d'Arles for A Discreet Exit Through Darkness in 2023. [9]

Contents

Life and work

Soumya Sankar Bose is an independent documentary photographer, [10] born and brought up in Midnapore, West Bengal India. His long-term project on retired Jatra (Bengal) [11] artistes had been funded by India Foundation for the Arts. His work has reviewed by The New York Times, [12] The Caravan, [13] The Huffington Post, BBC, [14] The Indian Express, [15] The Telegraph, [16] NPR [17] and many more. Bose has worked on commission for clients including Le Monde, [18] HSBC Bank, Bloomberg Businessweek Magazine, Financial Times, The Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Acumen, The Wall Street Journal etc.

Bose's work "Let's Sing an Old Song" explores concepts of nostalgia, modernity, performativity and the transformation of art in a changing world, his work both creates and documents reality. His portraits of Jatra artists are staged spectacles that evoke not only the tragedy of this waning tradition, but also those of its practitioners. Using photography as a performative medium rather than documentary tool, Bose brings an original approach to an often photographically explored space of dying art form in India. [19]

Immersing the viewer in a surreal universe is crucial to Bose's project "Full moon on a Dark Night." By way of those portraits, Bose conducts a psychological exploration of a community of individuals who have been relentlessly persecuted by society because of their identities and their gender or sexual orientations. The work looks closely at the LGBT community in eastern India through a fantastical lens, often projecting a world devoid of restrictive laws and social taboos that the community regularly comes up against. Other images in the work are responses to these very constraints imposed by the state and society. It is here that Bose makes use of visual metaphors—a gas mask, a tiger in the wild, a choppy sea engulfing a man struggling against the current—to evoke notions of censorship and surveillance and feelings of suffocation and anxiety. [20]

Soumya Sankar Bose’s project Where The Birds Never Sing (2017-2020) brought together Bose’s long-term project on the Marichjhapi massacre, the forcible eviction in 1979 of Bengali lower caste refugees from the Marichjhapi Island in Sundarbans, West Bengal, India and the subsequent death of thousands by police gunfire, starvation, and disease. Experimenter Outpost takes this project back to Kumirmari, Sundarbans, near the Marichjhapi island through a series of enlarged reproductions of Bose’s images that mark the landscape. The images become sentinels, standing as silent witnesses of unspeakable atrocities committed over forty years ago, on a land that whispered into Bose’s ears incredible stories of loss, memory and the complex political history it represents.

Bose’s latest project A Discreet Exit Through Darkness (2020-2022) is a VR360 film inspired by the mystery of his mother going missing for three years at the age of nine. Narrated by Bose’s reimagined grandfather, the work transports the viewer deep into the psyche of a protracted, devastating search in 1969 Midnapore. The film, A Discreet Exit through Darkness, is the first virtual reality (VR), non-animated feature-length film to be ever made and explores a technology that soon promises to be a segue into the imminent metaverse. [21]

Publications

Awards and fellowships

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References