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Trigger Happy

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It is time, says creative photographer
Leena Kejriwal, that photo art grew in the country. By Purabi
Shridhar
THE urge for creative fulfilment was always there. But it
was only after exploring other media like the brush and paint that Leena
Kejriwal discovered that the camera could capture the very soul of its subject.
Now, she wants to see ‘photo art’ make a big impact as an art medium
in the country.
With her recent successful debut exhibition
‘Kalikatha’ on her home city Kolkata, Leena has proved that the
camera lens in the right hands and with the right treatment can be a powerful
tool of art.
Getting
Focussed
While schooling from Maharani Gayatri Devi School, Jaipur,
and graduating in political science from Loreto College, Kolkata, Leena knew
that she was creatively inclined. However, “it was only after my marriage
and two babies that I began to explore the field seriously,” says Leena.
Once Leena settled on photography, she went about it in her quiet,
methodical manner. The 34-year-old began her formal training at the studio of
Girish Mistry, Mumbai, where she did a diploma course in advertising,
photography and advanced lighting techniques.
Then, she worked under
the guidance of veteran photographer Raghu Rai at various workshops. She honed
her skills so much that she earned a membership of the prestigious British
Institute of Professional Photography (BIPP) and also of the Photographers Guild
of India (PGI).
What has clearly been a major influence on Leena has
been her interaction with veteran lensman, Raghu Rai. According to Leena,
“he helped me understand what was lacking in my pictures, to read my
photos and to create subjects in my viewfinder. Just being with him and see him
work has been a major
lesson.”
On the
Streets
“I started doing portraits, clicking people on the
streets and monuments,” she says. Even during family holidays, Leena
trained her camera less on her family and more on subjects that appealed to her!
Her shots of various monuments all over the country, from Puri to Rajasthan,
were her passport into the professional world of photography. The Hyatt Regency
hotel selected her pictures for their guest rooms at Mumbai and
Kolkata.
“The art director for the project came from the USA.
About 600 prints were selected; they were etched, scratched and acid washed to
make them look like pencil sketches,” Leena says with justifiable
pride.
Leena also set up a studio to do ‘classical portraits of lay
people.’ Her reasoning being that ordinary people make far more
fascinating subjects than celebrities.
With her confidence getting a
boost from the Hyatt project, she felt it was time for an exhibition of her
work. The India Habitat Centre readily agreed to host her debut exhibition while
the venerable India International Centre (IIC), Delhi, has slotted her show for
the year-end.
And all she did was to send her folder to the IIC,
which was clearly impressed by her calibre. The overall appreciation for her
work has clearly given the young photo-artist a real high!
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