Indian Memory Project: Tracing India's History Through Pictures

Anusha Yadav, founder of the Indian Memory Project, traces the histories and identities of the Indian Subcontinent via photographs found in personal archives
Contributed by Rakesh Anand Bakshi, Mumbai. My father, Anand Prakash Bakshi, as a child with his parents. Rawalpindi (now Pakistan). Circa 1930
Contributed by Rakesh Anand Bakshi, Mumbai. My father, Anand Prakash Bakshi, as a child with his parents. Rawalpindi (now Pakistan). Circa 1930Courtesy: Indian Memory Project
Updated on
4 min read

Have you heard of Anna Hari Salunke? He is credited to be the first person to perform as a heroine in Indian cinema when he played the role of Rani Taramati in Dada Saheb Phalke's first full-length film, "Raja Harishchandra" (1913). In 1917, Salunke became the first to play a double gender role in Indian cinema, by portraying both the hero and the heroine in "Lanka Dahan."

Many names associated with our long-standing cinema tradition have faded into oblivion. Cinema provided a sense of relief even during the tumultuous colonial times. However, a collection of sepia-toned photographs on the website of the Indian Memory Project allows you to learn more about the stalwarts of cinema, who are, in fact, India's first "Cinema Citizens."

A post shared by IMP on Instagram
A post shared by IMP on InstagramIMP/Instagram

The rise of cinema, the fight for Independence, the partition. These are not simply moments in time. They are an integral aspect of our historical heritage. Archiving these smaller histories from India's timeline is Anusha Yadav, founder of the Indian Memory Project (IMP) which is a visual and narrative-based online archive that traces the histories and identities of the Indian Subcontinent via photographs found in personal archives.

"An archive is used for references, to understand what the world is made up of. These stories are how people want to understand their past. And I have always been interested in photography, not just the technical and cultural aspects of it, but also about the people in front of the lens. These people were born, and they lived a life. When I started IMP, it was an experiment. I wanted to see how, if I put pictures and categorize them, they are bound to share some keywords. It is all anthropological evidence. Tracing the history of an art form, such as photography, can expose to you how the world evolved," Yadav explains.

Another post shared by IMP on Instagram
Another post shared by IMP on InstagramIMP/Instagram

The same emotion drove her to create Cinema Citizens, a sub-project that focuses on the people who created the industry that is now a behemoth. "For ordinary junta, there is no knowledge about the origins of the industry. Women opening studios, Gujarati traders who became pioneers of films. It is incredible. A lot of these people migrated to Pakistan post the Partition. This information was scattered, and I wanted to summarize their stories in one place," Yadav narrates.

Her archival process for the project, which was started in 2010, involves asking many questions. "The photographs collected for the project are mostly crowdsourced. Sometimes, people send them to us; sometimes I find interesting pictures or a person who has a fascinating story. But we have certain checks in place. Yet, the focus is not on factual accuracy; people get years and dates wrong," she tells us. As a curator and photo archivist, what helps is Yadav's interest in forming connections with people. "A story is understood by two people - the person who tells it and the person who listens. And each time, that story changes, in emotion, form, and that's the beauty of a story."

Indian Memory Project's Instagram is filled with small anecdotes that tell the stories behind one veritable object - a photograph. A self-portrait of Yadav with her father is one of her favourites, but her knack for storytelling is a gift from her mother's side. A collage of these six women from her family forms the cover image of the project's page on Instagram. "My aunt started the whole storytelling journey, and it stayed with me."

For representation purposes only
For representation purposes only

And in this journey of storytelling, she is not alone. On why many organisations are archiving India's historical legacy, Yadav says, "It is always interesting to look at a piece of evidence from different points of view. Some pursue it academically; some are focused on objects and letters; I focus on photographs, and there is enough material to fuel 65 more organisations. The subcontinent is not quite what we thought; many more went down, and there are many more stories to tell. The driving force for me is curiosity. This is how I learn something new, so there is never a dull moment."

Related Stories

No stories found.
logo
Outlook Traveller
www.outlooktraveller.com