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Gauri Gill

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Nationality
  
Indian

Known for
  
Photography

Gauri Gill assetsyesstudionaturemortecachenaturemorte40

Born
  
1970 (age 46–47)
New Delhi, India

Education
  
Delhi College of Arts, Parsons School

Alma mater
  
Stanford University (2002)

Gauri Gill (born 1970) is an Indian contemporary photographer who lives in New Delhi. She has been called "one of India's most respected photographers" by the New York Times and one of “the most thoughtful photographers active in India today” in The Wire. In 2011 Gill was awarded the Grange Prize, Canada's most prestigious contemporary photography award. The jury said her works “often address ordinary heroism within challenging environments depicting the artist’s often-intimate relationships with her subjects with a documentary spirit and a human concern over issues of survival."

Contents

Gauri Gill Works

Education and early life

Gauri Gill Gauri Gill and Rajesh Vangad Fields of Sight

Born in Chandigarh, India, Gauri Gill received her BFA in Applied Art at the Delhi College of Arts in New Delhi, India. She earned her BFA in Photography at the Parsons School of Design, New York in 1994, and MFA in Photography at Stanford University in 2002.

Work and career

In The Americans (2000-2007) she photographed her family and friends across the Indian diaspora in America.

Gauri Gill The art of slowing down Livemint

A decade-long study of marginalized communities in rural Rajasthan called Notes from the Desert (1999 –ongoing) has resulted in individual exhibitions and projects such as The Mark on the Wall, Jannat, Balika Mela, Birth Series and Ruined Rainbow. Of this work, she says, “The girls who come to the fair have an urge to know. Those who stepped into my photo tend also wished to portray themselves, as they are, or as they see themselves, or to invent new selves for the camera. Their attempts may have been tentative or bold, but this book may be seen as a catalogue of that desire.”

Gauri Gill Gauri Gill39s shots of 39ordinary heroism39 win Grange Prize The

The 1984 notebook (2005- 2014) is an example of collaboration and ‘active listening’, and of using photography as a memory practice. This notebook about the anti-Sikh pogrom that occurred in New Delhi in 1984 contains photographs taken by Gill in 2005, 2009 and 2014 alongside captions from the Indian print media in which they first appeared and text responses by thirty five artists - including writers, poets and film makers.

Gauri Gill The art of slowing down Livemint

In January 2007, along with Sunil Gupta and Radhika Singh, she co-founded and edited Camerawork Delhi a free newsletter about independent photography from New Delhi and elsewhere.

In 2011 she won the Grange Prize, Canada's most prestigious contemporary photography award.

Gauri Gill Gauri Gill

In 2012, she curated a major exhibition called Transportraits: Women and Mobility in the City investigating safety and experiences of women on the streets.

Since 2013, she has collaborated with Rajesh Vangad, a renowned Warli artist, on Fields of Sight, combining the contemporary language of photography with the ancient one of Warli drawing to co-create new narratives. .

References

Gauri Gill Wikipedia