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Privacy – Dayanita Singh

 

What can a photographer in India capture on film other than disasters or the exotic? Dayanita Singh was preoccupied by this question after she had spent many years documenting the poverty in her homeland. Her answer was a return to the world from which she came, to India’s extended, well-to-do families and their fine homes. Both on commission and on her own, she photographed friends and friends of friends, creating a portrait of another society, complete with its traditional and post-colonial symbols of prosperity.

 

The self-confident elite of the country is a segment nearly unknown by the West. Privacy provides great insight into a closed world characterized by tight family solidarity. Singh shows the people as they would like to see themselves, in the middle of splendidly decorated rooms and surrounded by possessions that represent their self-image. At a certain point in her work, Singh realized that even without their residents, the rooms were occupied by the invisible generations that had lived there. The book closes with photographs of interiors – empty but still filled with spirits. This book has a clothbound hardcover with dust jacket, 128 pages, 90 tritone plates, and measures 20 x 24 cm.

 

Artist / Author

Publishing is also a significant part of the Dayanita Singh’s practice: in her books she experiments with alternate forms of producing and viewing photographs. Here, Singh’s latest is the “book-object,” a work that is concurrently a book, an art object, an exhibition and a catalog. Learn more about Singh and her artistic practice on her website.

 

 

Sourced / excerpted from this artist’s website. (2022)

Card Catalog

Privacy

by Dayanita Singh,

with texts by Dayanita Singh and Britta Schmitz

Steidl, Göttingen, 2004

ISBN: 3 88243 962 9

Date Published

20 November

Category
Books
Last, First M. Book. City: Publisher, Year Published. Print. ISBN