cover image: Vintage Car Rally, Bombay, 1985

20.500.12592/72xr9r

Vintage Car Rally, Bombay, 1985

1 Jan 1985

Taraporevala's works beautifully narrate the vivacity of the Parsi community in all its glory. The photographs are an absolute visual treat replete with human emotions of laughter, mirth, anguish, concern, all accentuating the warmth of relations of the subjects towards one another. Sooni Taraporevala has captured the shrines, the celebrations, the rituals, the customs and the way of life of the Parsis in her photographs. She gives us a peek into their domestic spaces, their eccentricities and their festivities. They chronicle not just a community but the times. The images have an easy, languid feel to them telling us of the people and the places - the presence of the city of Bombay and its intricate connection with the Parsis.
photograph vintage car
Identifier
ngma-16823
Material
Pigment Print (Photograph)
Note
Screenwriter and Photographer, Sooni Taraporevala was born in 1957 in Bombay, India. After her schooling, she received a scholarship to attend Harvard University, where she studied English Literature and Photography followed by Film Theory and Criticism of the New York University. She received her MA in 1981, after which she returned to India to work as a freelance photographer. In 1986 she wrote her first screenplay, Salaam Bombay!, for director Mira Nair. The film was nominated for an Oscar. Her second screenplay, Mississippi Masala, also for Mira Nair, was made into a film starring Denzel Washington for which Taraporevala won the Osella award for Best Screenplay at the Venice Film Festival, 1990. Her other screenplay credits include the films Such a Long Journey, based on the novel by Rohinton Mistry and directed by Sturla Gunnarson, the film Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar directed by Dr Jabbar Patel and The Namesake, directed by Mira Nair, based on the book by Jhumpa Lahiri. She wrote and directed her first feature film, Little Zizou, 2008, which won the National Award from the Indian government. In 2000 she also authored and published a book of her photographs PARSIS: The Zoroastrians of India, A Photographic Journey. Shot over 25 years, the book documents the community through intimate, everyday moments. Photographs from Parsis were included in the Tate Modern's 2001 exhibition Century City: Art and Culture in the Modern Metropolis, India Moderna IVAM Institut Valencia d'Art Modern 2008, Photoquai, Musee de Quai Branly, 2009, and most recently, solo shows at Harvard University's Sert Gallery in October 2012, Chemould Prescott Road in Mumbai and at the National Gallery of Modern Art, Delhi where they are part of NGMA's permanent collection.
Pages
40.6 x 61 cm
Published in
India
Type
Photograph