Articles features
Taj Mahal perhaps the world's most photographed monument (August 19 World Photography Day)
Agra Aug 19
The Taj Mahal in Agra is perhaps
the world's most photographed monument. Each minute hundreds of cameras
click to shoot memorable photographs.
"It's a matter of pride to be photographed with the Taj Mahal," Denis, a tourist from Australia, told IANS.
These
days, with almost every one in possession of a mobile or a digital
camera, you can see people taking selfies or posing for a group
photograph with friends or relatives. Now with the Taj Mahal getting its
own Twitter handle and the monument complex equipped with WiFi
facility, no one misses the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to shoot and
share.
The Taj has not lost its charm. It continues to remain the
delight of photographers from all over the world. Lonely Planet's
'ultimate travel list' includes the Taj in the top five tourist
destinations in the world. The Taj Mahal is annually visited by over six
million people. Unofficial figures are 10 million, as children below 15
do not have to purchase a ticket to enter.
Each day hordes of
photographers - both amateurs and professionals - shoot pictures of the
white marble mausoleum, bringing joy and excitement to those who pose
against its backdrop. "Many feel it's a fulfilment of a long-cherished
dream," Amit Sishodia of Agra Beats travel agency told IANS.
"It's the architecture, the perspective and the unique backdrop that
includes the Yamuna and a whitish skyline that appears to extend to
eternity that I find most appealing," city photographer Hemant told
IANS.
Ramesh Chandra Khandelwal, 90 plus, Agra's oldest
photographer who runs the more than a century old firm of Priya Lal and
Sons, said the Taj Mahal will never lose its fascination and awe.
"It
is one building with immaculate, Nayaab dimensions, perfect lighting
conditions, such variety of angles and contrasts, what else could a
photographer want? And if you take into account its history and the
romanticism associated with it, who would not like to be photographed
with it," Khandelwal told IANS.
Wildlife photographer Lalit
Rajora, who began his journey 18 years ago from the Taj Mahal, still
cannot delink himself from the grand Mughal monument.
"The grand
Taj Mahal, with its enticing beauty, has an eternal fascination for me.
Its aesthetic beauty, pristine craftsmenship and grandeur attracts me
as a photograph does. As a photographer, when this attraction coverted
into an unfading romance and passion is difficult to tell. All I can
say is that the Taj, under the seasonal hues of the sky enkindles my
soul, gives wings to my imagination and meaning to my expression and
creativity," Rajoria waxed eloquent while speaking to IANS.
Vijay
Goyal, owner of the Speed Colour Lab, who spent 20-odd years at the Taj
Mahal shooting pictures for tourists and VIPs, told IANS: "I recall
the statement of a lady tourist long back. She reacted: 'Oh my god,
this looks much better than the photograph I saw back home'."
Goyal
said the Taj Mahal faces south. "The sun rises from the east on the
left and traverses the whole distance to the right (west) providing
different contrasts, shades and colours - never a dull moment. Each
angle is different, its symmetry and geometry is perfect and flawless.
There is a mix of colours - red sand-stone juxtaposed with white marble
and a profusion of green vegetation, while the shades of blue and
white. Rare is a man-made structure in the world that provides such a
spectacular variety and mind you, there is no artificial lighting
anywhere as for the Eiffel Tower or many other monuments."
Vishal,
a photographer and owner of the Nice Studio, one of Agra's oldest, told
IANS: "Every day, every hour, every season is different. The white
marble mausoleum reflects nature's varied moods. People see romance and
poetry in it. The beauty of the Taj Mahal lies in its totality, not in
parts. The framed portrait - like the view from the main entrance - has
been compared to a veiled bride. The mystery of the Taj's beauty will
never be fully explained. The colours of Jannat have been used to weave
intricate patterns and layouts, the fountains, the green shrubs, the
natural skyline ...you look at it from any angle, it's a manifestation
of beauty and no wonder many say it's a divine monument."
"Even
the visitors in their thousands coming daily are part of the Taj Mahal,
adding colours and flavours of a cosmopolitan nature, as if the whole
world is represented here in a miniscule. The tranquility and the awe
that one feels gives it a special status. The Taj is a living and
breathing monument, you can feel it," 72-year-old Surendra Sharma, who
is associated with the Fine Arts Studio, told IANS.
"Now, of
course with advanced technology and camera-fitted mobile phones,
everyone is a photographer, but there was a time when with primitive
cameras and shooting in black and white, the real essence of photography
was brought out and memorable pictures were taken," Sharma addded.
(Brij Khandelwal can be contacted at [email protected])