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Raghu Rai, Tilling land,Palam airport,1970, Highres

An exhibition of archival images of three Indian master-photographers takes us back to a Delhi that no longer exists

BySiddhi Jain

October 4, 2019 (IANSlife) Studded with exquisite remanants of history, Delhi was not always this busy and polluted megapolis groaning under the weight of almost 2 crore people. ‘Delhi That Was’, an exhibition that opens at the Ojas Art Gallery today shows us what life in the national capital was between 1940s and 1990s through 45 archival images captured by photographers Habib Rahman, Madan Mahatta and Raghu Rai. The images belong to collections of the three photographers spanning over the five decades, and will be on display till November 12.

Madan Mahatta, Connaught Place Rain Flooding 1970
Madan Mahatta, Connaught Place Rain Flooding 1970


The exhibition will depict the aesthetics of Delhi – through architecture and lifestyles – and how the city gradually transformed into a cacophony of concrete constructions.

Madan Mahatta, Queen Elizabeth & Dr Rajinder Prasad through Cannaught Place 1961
Madan Mahatta, Queen Elizabeth & Dr Rajinder Prasad through Cannaught Place 1961


On display will be images capturing the rich cultural life in the noodle-thin lanes of Old Delhi and the architectural wonders like Qutub Minar, Jantar Mantar and other such monuments that became a thing of the past.

Habib Rahman, Patel Bhavan 1973
Habib Rahman, Patel Bhavan 1973


The purpose of photography is to capture the times we live in, because this is visual history. The Delhi that I photographed 50 years ago, does not exist today. This is a very important role of documentary photography or photojournalism, which cannot be replaced,” Raghu Rai had told IANS in an earlier interview.

Raghu Rai, Dust storm, Red fort, 1986,Highres
Raghu Rai, Dust storm, Red fort, 1986,Highres


“In the last fifty years, photography has seen a paradigm shift. But the purpose remains the same, to capture an evocative moment that reflects the essence of time as this is the visual history for tomorrow,” he said.

Details: Ojas Art Gallery, 1AQ, Near Qutub Minar, Mehrauli, New Delhi (11 a.m. - 7 p.m. from Tuesday to Sunday)



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Siddhi Jain can be contacted at siddhi.j@ians.in

Editing by Ritu Pandey and N. Lothungbeni Humtsoe

IANS Life