Canvas of emotions

Painter-turned-photographer Swarup Chatterjee captures movements, colours, expressions and action in his photographs.;

By :  dipti
Update: 2017-09-03 00:00 GMT
Leafy headgear
Leafy headgear
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From dry leaves, crows taking wing,  an angry passerby’s expression to a beggar in tears sitting in a corner and colours of freshness after a monsoon downpour, painter-turned-award winning photographer Swarup Chatterjee captures varied movements, expressions, colours and action. “My story is that of a little child who always wanted to be an artist — a painter. However, just like in most middle-class households, my parents wanted me to become a doctor, engineer or chartered accountant. While I wished to match up to their expectations, in reality I couldn’t,” says Swarup, adding, “While I did graduate in commerce from Calcutta University and cleared the initial levels of chartered accountancy, I started my career as a freelance cartoonist and then went on to become a full-time news reporter with a leading newspaper. Gradually, time pushed me to photography.”

Let's dance
Let’s dance
By the bay
By the bay
Stop the press!
Stop the press!

His first stint with the camera, he says, began when as a child he laid eyes on a Canon automatic camera, which his father had purchased. “I remember, before that he had an Agfa. Both were film cameras. I was in love with his Canon and enjoyed shooting with it. I continued to shoot with it for a very long time but hoped to afford a better camera that would provide me with creative flexibility. Some six years back, I finally took the plunge when I could afford a DSLR along with some lenses and my journey began.”

The dreamer
Psychedelic happiness

He uses a Canon EOS 6D camera, with his most commonly used lenses being 16mm-35mm lens and a 24mm-105mm lens. He shares that he loves to click rare moments of human emotions. “Expressions that appear and disappear on the human face within a fraction of a second, is what I strive to capture. A few days back, I was in a village in Cambodia and inside a house, there was a newborn baby sleeping on a hammock. I was trying to photograph the child from a top-down angle with my ultra-wide lens. And all of a sudden, while in deep sleep, the baby smiled for a fraction of a second. Maybe he was dreaming something special. I felt so lucky to have captured that moment.”

Puff daddy
One step closer

Since painting has been a huge part of Swarup’s life, his entire approach to photography is that of a painter too. “The smudging technique that I used to apply on my canvas, on freshly applied paint, has got replaced with the slow shutter speed of my camera. I still smudge, but now with my camera. I can never leave painting. I have just moved on. Instead of brushes, paints and the canvas, I have my lenses, natural light and the camera sensor now.”

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