Maharaja portrait photography in 21st century India

A new exhibition at the city palace museum in Udaipur explores the portraits of the Maharajas and their families taken by their personal photographers, but only a few people know that the same kind of photographers, although a dying breed, are still around in India using more or less the same techniques as in the 19th and beginning of the 20th century.

Not so long ago, street photographers using big old wooden cameras where a common sight in India. In Jaipur, right next to the wall of the Palace of Winds (Hawa Mahal) there used to be at least ten photographers only a few years back but now there is only one left. The rest must have found some other way to make a living now that everyone has a digital camera, and only an occasional tourist would sometime be interested in these old style pictures as a memento of India.

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A few weeks ago, when my friend Philippe Lopez was visiting Delhi, we went looking for the photographer from whom I had bought such a camera a couple of years ago, only to find that his shop was gone and that he had mysteriously disappeared one day never to be seen again! I don’t even know his name. I do however have his old camera and a wonderful collection of some wonderful b&w basic cut-and-paste collage images.

Another photographer, Bharat Bhushan Mahajan, could very well be the last such photographer in Delhi. His ‘shop’ is in the park behind Birla Mandir in New Delhi. He has been using the same wooden camera and the same backdrop since 1949. The camera shows obvious signs of wear and tear and when we came for the session that was arranged two days in advance, he needed to first fix the camera using a hammer and some glue. this took about an hour. The price of a finished black and white photo here used to be 30 rupees (US$0.60) for 3 pictures but there are no customers these days for this style of photography. He took the camera out especially for us. Mahajan learned his trade as a young man from his father who was master photographer in what is today Pakistan, and it is indeed a remarkable trade

How does this camera work?

Alec McHoul describes the process very well in the wonderful article about Street and Studio: Popular Commercial Photography in India and Bangaladesh where he explores the exact same technique and compares it to the Calotype, one of the earliest photographic processes known.

The camera he uses, he writes, probably stems from the turn of the century or even earlier and operates in an intriguing way. Mahajan loads the camera with negative paper (Kodak commercial photographic paper) and then exposes the paper by taking off the lens cap (there’s no shutter) and counts to guess the exposure time – 2 to 3 seconds in daylight and 15 to 20 seconds in subdued light. During the exposure of the paper, the client must stay utterly still and not blink or change facial expression or else the picture will be blurred. To end the exposure, he replaces the lens cap. To develop the print, he uses the back of the camera itself as a kind of darkroom. Inside there is a tray containing homemade developing fluid. He pulls the paper out from behind the lens and dips it in the developer while looking at it through a red glass panel (which prevents white light from reaching the negative paper). Once it is sufficiently developed, the paper is removed from the camera and dipped in a fixative tray (held underneath the camera) for a few seconds; then he washes the paper negative in a bucket of clean fresh water. He dries it as much as he can and then mounts the negative print on the frame visible in front of the camera lens and re-exposes the print for 10 to 15 seconds, again depending on the light conditions. Because he is re-photographing the original negative on to a further sheet of negative paper, he ends up with a positive print which he develops in the same way (back through the two solutions in the rear of the camera, washed in water and dried). It is then ready for the customer to take away. The whole process is while-you-wait – about 20 minutes from start to finish, no film, no plate.

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Sephi Bergerson (left), Bharat Bhushan Mahajan (right) and his son (center) at his studio, New Delhi

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the paper negative and the finished picture in a bucket of clean fresh water

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A couple of samples form my collection. unknown photographer.

  • http://www.craigfergusonimages.com Craig Ferguson

    I remember seeing some of these cameras in Jaipur and Agra. Most of the photographers I saw in other parts of India were using old Pentax and Nikon SLRs (this was late 90s and early 2000s). An age is dying out.

  • http://www.craigfergusonimages.com Craig Ferguson

    I remember seeing some of these cameras in Jaipur and Agra. Most of the photographers I saw in other parts of India were using old Pentax and Nikon SLRs (this was late 90s and early 2000s). An age is dying out.

  • http://www.kamaldesign.com Francesca Camisoli

    Beautiful subject Sephi! I’ve just remembered that I actually have a picture somewhere taken by one of these street photographers in Jaipur some years ago. It just looks from a different era, as if time had stopped. Fascinating image filled with nostalgia, especially as it is a photo with a friend of mine that I’ve lost touch with…..

  • http://www.kamaldesign.com Francesca Camisoli

    Beautiful subject Sephi! I’ve just remembered that I actually have a picture somewhere taken by one of these street photographers in Jaipur some years ago. It just looks from a different era, as if time had stopped. Fascinating image filled with nostalgia, especially as it is a photo with a friend of mine that I’ve lost touch with…..

  • http://www.samaystudio.com Jigar

    This is so utterly interesting! I’ve never seen any of these guys in India. I’ve only seen the somewhat more modern guys with cameras like the Nikon & Pentax SLRs mentioned by Craig at spots like around the Taj Mahal.

  • http://www.samaystudio.com Jigar

    This is so utterly interesting! I’ve never seen any of these guys in India. I’ve only seen the somewhat more modern guys with cameras like the Nikon & Pentax SLRs mentioned by Craig at spots like around the Taj Mahal.

  • http://www.19cphoto.com Tony

    What is the plate size of Bharat Bhushan Mahajan’s camera? Possibly I can find another wooden camera of the same period to replace his aging one.

  • http://www.19cphoto.com Tony

    What is the plate size of Bharat Bhushan Mahajan’s camera? Possibly I can find another wooden camera of the same period to replace his aging one.

  • http://www.flickr.com/photos/shivahuja shiv ahuja

    wonderful! i’ve always wondered how they did this! Just discovered your site, love it. lots of informative posts.

  • http://www.flickr.com/photos/shivahuja shiv ahuja

    wonderful! i’ve always wondered how they did this! Just discovered your site, love it. lots of informative posts.

  • Sony

    wow that was an interesting subject to raise. those old sepia photos had a distinct old world charm attached to them.

  • Sony

    wow that was an interesting subject to raise. those old sepia photos had a distinct old world charm attached to them.

  • http://blog.twilightfairy.in twilight fairy

    fascinating. wd love to meet this guy myself.

  • http://blog.twilightfairy.in twilight fairy

    fascinating. wd love to meet this guy myself.

  • http://www.sephi.com/personal/working-with-an-old-wood-camera/ FotoWala | Street photography in India | old wood camera | Sephi Bergerson Photography

    [...] back I wrote a post titled Maharaja’s postrait photography in 21st centure India about a photographic process that was invented in India and has been used for decades by many [...]

  • http://nikond-5000.blogspot.com Jaspreet

    I have personally seen these 1st generation box cameras in Nagpur, Maharashtra(INDIA) couple years (around 15 years) back out side a place called Maharaj bagh. It was full Lab inside that box to take and develop Black and White photos in about 15 mins.

  • http://nikond-5000.blogspot.com Jaspreet

    I have personally seen these 1st generation box cameras in Nagpur, Maharashtra(INDIA) couple years (around 15 years) back out side a place called Maharaj bagh. It was full Lab inside that box to take and develop Black and White photos in about 15 mins.

  • http://www.sephi.com/personal/portrait-photography-in-a-daylight-studio/ FotoWala | Portrait Photography | Daylight Studio | Sephi Bergerson Photography

    [...] the young generation in Delhi using an old wood camera. I have already written two posts about it; Maharaja Portraits in 21st Century India where I explained the photographic process, and Video Killed The Radio Star about my own project [...]

  • http://ekaresources.com/blog/fotowala-documentary-photography-in-india/ FotoWala-Documentary Photography in India

    [...] Delhi and many other places across the subcontinent, and which may nearly be lost to us now. Click here to read the blog post. Sephi Bergerson is a documentary photographer based in New Delhi since [...]

  • Sumit Sba1

    I just read this blog. in Delhi behind the Jain temple,ahead of Madanjees shop at Chandi Chowck a few years back i watched a photographer using such a camera witha Russian lens. and process you describe.I saw the prints which were passport size . i couldnt understand how he was processing the prints and he wouldnt explain to me I took some pictures of him and he seemed to have a steady stream of customers.

    Very interesting article.

  • http://www.sephi.com Sephi Bergerson

    Dear Sumit, thanks for this comment. Yes, these street photographers used to be all over India but very few of them still operate, mainly in tourist areas. The process is very simple and basic. I’m going to write another post about the process very soon so stay tuned. cheers, Sephi

  • http://www.sephi.com/personal/alternative-photographic-process-in-india-the-fatafat-project/ FotoWala | photographic project in India | The Fatafat Project | Sephi Bergerson Photography

    [...] at tourists spots like Jaipur’s Hawa Mahal or Pushkar. The photographer was using a big old wood camera to take amazing vintage looking portraits on black and white paper. We had our picture taken for [...]

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