Sooni Taraporevala’s close relationship with her home-city, Mumbai, is depicted in the 30 images selected for聽Home in the City, Bombay 1976-Mumbai 2016. On show at , Manchester, the exhibition collates scenes that the photographer has captured across four decades. As an insider,听Taraporevala provides an insightful and affectionate catalogue of pictures that cut聽through聽divisions of class, community, age and landscape. Her interest in photography聽and its ability to document momentary glances and everyday events provides a subtle reflection on culture and politics since 1976. We speak to the photographer, screenwriter and filmmaker about her connection with the city, as well as the process of working with聽guest聽curator Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi. The exhibition is reviewed in the current issue of .
A: Home in the City captures the cultural and generational diversity of Mumbai. How did the project begin and what draws you back to the city?
ST: I was born in Bombay, grew up there, was in America for most of my twenties and then in scattered periods until 1992 after which I moved back home decisively and stayed. This exhibition came about in reverse. It鈥檚 from looking at my archives that the theme emerged.
A: How has your relationship with Mumbai changed, and how is this apparent in your images?
ST: My relationship with my city has remain unchanged. I have always loved it and will continue to love it. It is infinitely unknowable and therefore infinitely discoverable. I never tire of it.
A: Mumbai is a city bursting with colour. Why have you chosen to continue shooting in black and white?
ST: I have shot the city in colour as well, but the theme of this particular show is the city in black and white. I started out as an exclusively b&w photographer. My mentor Raghubir Singh, the master of colour started me shooting in colour. I used to carry two cameras, one with 200 ASA color Kodachrome the other with B&W Tri-x 400 ASA film.
A: How does your background in film affect your perception of the world?
ST: It鈥檚 the reverse. I was a photographer before I was anything else. As a photographer I have a visual sense, I know my light, lenses, perspective.
A: Can you discuss the exhibition’s layout and curatorial decisions made by in conversation with Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi.
ST: Siddharth and I arranged and rearranged small photos on our respective floors 鈥 he in Goa, me in Mumbai 鈥 until both of us were united in our decisions and then we had a celebratory glass of wine. Poppy did a magnificent job hanging the show and I am very excited to see it when I come in July.
A: This is your first solo show in the UK. What is important to you about exhibiting the work internationally?
ST: Every photographer wants to share their work. And I鈥檓 no exception. I鈥檓 so grateful to have this opportunity where 30 photographs of my city are going to be on view in your city for the better part of a year, that too at the Whitworth, such an awesome space and institution.
A: Are there any favourite encounters or stories you could tell relating to one or two of your images?
ST:聽The first,听Bernard , Bombay 1987聽was taken during the shooting of the film Salaam Bombay! Bernard was the youngest member of the gang. Here he is monkeying around between takes. He was subsequently adopted by Sandi Sissell the DP of Salaam Bombay! He has been living in Los Angeles since 1992, works at Panavision, is married and has a daughter who is a national level ice skating champion. The second image is聽The Gateway of India from the Taj Mahal Hotel, Bombay 1977. In聽my third year as an undergraduate at Harvard I was desperately homesick. I took a leave of absence for a semester and came home with my newly purchased first ‘real’ camera, a Nikkormat. This was the first good photo I ever took. This is the same hotel that was besieged by terrorists for four bloody days and nights in 2008. Now of course no windows can be left open and no light streams in.
Sooni Taraporevala: Home in the City, Bombay 1976-Mumbai 2016, until 2018, The Whitworth, Manchester.
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Credits
1.听The Gateway of India from the Taj Mahal Hotel, Bombay 1977. Courtesy of the artist.



