In early 2021, Landour, an old hill station, appeared even more somnolent as the pandemic had slowed time to a crawl. This town, relatively unchanged by human interference, nestled amongst nature’s cycles of existence, death, and rebirth, carried on regardless of world events or crises.
While the greater body of work from this Landour series came together later, I realized early on that the superficial absence of “clarity” in those painterly Bombay images was not limited to expressing a strange time in the city but could also mirror my perception of time in a place like Landour. This compelled me to pursue the thread.
I suddenly became aware of the smallest natural changes around me and went to work. No longer confined to a city flat, I roamed the forests and quiet paths, making thousands of images. I captured the rich moonrises in the dark hillsides and the serene cold twilights, and when the seasons changed, I found myself completely overwhelmed by the surreal mists rising from the plains. Time in Landour gave me immense creative contentment and fervour, allowing me to witness its unassuming yet intense beauty daily while it persistently cycled through life, rejuvenating and reviving itself.
The ambiguity of time gripped me like never before. When does a tree stop growing or a leaf cease to sprout? When does dusk turn into twilight? And what of the house that has stood for a hundred years? Although it appears frozen in time, it undergoes imperceptible changes every moment. It was these imperceptible shifts and changes that I sought to explore through photography. And so, I started with quarter-second handheld exposures, gradually increasing them to five. The shutter’s indeterminate timing allowed me to extend the duration of these moments, allowing them to exist “in time” for a little longer.
This series is a visual journal capturing those moments, which are mere moments in the grand scheme of eternity. Echoing Robert Doisneau’s words:
“A hundredth of a second here, a hundredth of a second there – even if you put them end to end, they still only add up to one, two, perhaps three seconds, snatched from eternity.”
Years of time in Landour spoken for in mere seconds of images. Seconds, in no small manner, saved me from a certain existential dead end.
What started in Bombay found full bloom in Landour—an immense resurgence in my creative method, steering me onto a path where the world felt less daunting. Since then, I’ve regained enough bandwidth to rekindle several old friendships and even forge a few new ones. One second at a time, there are numerous moments to cherish and countless stories to unfold, and perhaps this rudderless, leaking boat is not as hopeless as it once seemed.