
Decades ago FW Champion8217;s Camera in Tiger-land and the Jungle in Sunlight and Shadows inspired a generation of hunters to give up the gun for the camera. Champion8217;s efforts, in fact, gave India the first photographs of tigers and leopards in the wild.
It is perhaps appropriate that MY Ghorpade8217;s part-memoir part-wildlife photograph collection in black and white is called Sunlight 038; Shadows. The book, first published in 1983, makes a reappearance now with new photographs taken over the last 20 years. Ghorpade8212;some would say like most former royals8212;is a conservationist. The Congressman and former Karnataka finance minister grew up in Sandur, making frequent trips to the forests in and around the valley.
But perhaps the best photographs are not of the elusive tiger or panther but of the common birds in Ghorpade8217;s native Sandur. With their constant movement, birds may be difficult to shoot but make up for their dizzying hopping by giving an opportunity every day to be watched and observed. That8217;s why Ghorpade could time himself to get that photograph of the purplerumped sunbird in flight, just before it alighted on its nest.
Sunlight 038; Shadows is also a fascinating account of the challenges and constant adjustments wildlife photography demands on field. For those with an interest in focal lengths and shutter speeds, Ghorpade offers practical tips gleaned over a lifetime of balancing sunlight with shadows. One of the happy results of this constant tinkering is the photograph of a tusker in the rain at Bandipur which fetched him the Australian Museum Award in 1977. In 1983 Ghorpade became the first wildlife photographer to be honoured with the international award of Master Photographer.
Two photographs stand out in the collection. One of a sloth bear with its cubs on its back as it walk towards a cave. The slightly grainy background and the shadowed rocks only highlight a certain melancholy in this maternal frame. The second photograph is what Ghorpade calls Hanuman8217;s Leap.
| nbsp; | This is the photographer8217;s challenge: how to lend majesty to a creature that inspires no stronger emotion than an affection bred out of familiarity? Ghorpade passes the test |
An essential test of wildlife photography is perhaps to get an outstanding shot of an animal that8217;s not rare. How to lend majesty to a creature that inspires no stronger emotion than an affection bred out of familiarity? Ghorpade passes that test with an excellent action picture of a langur, capturing its grace and agility mid-air as it leaps from one pillar to another.