MediaStorm
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Poulomi Basu has spent her career challenging power and oppression. 

“My work is all about questioning power and injustice because growing up I had so little of it,” Basu said.

Basu, who was born and raised in Kolkata, India, uses visual arts as a creative tool to shine a light on the plight of South Asian women facing misogyny under systemic patriarchal oppression, including highly-personal work that features herself and her mother as subjects.

She said her work is a way of reckoning with shame, violence and the need for acceptance.

“My mother and I were both victims of domestic violence and assault and every other thing that comes with it,” Basu said. “While I managed to escape, thanks to her sacrifice, she continues to live in a threatening space.”

In To Conquer Her Land, Basu tells the story of India's first cohort of border armed force women who were serving at the India/Pakistan border. 

Blood Speaks addresses the practice of Chaupadi, a form menstrual exile where women are sequestered from their families. 

Centralia is a docufiction in which indigenous women have become guerillas to fight the government to save the forests in Central India they call home.

In the highly-personal work, Fireflies, Basu turns her camera on herself and her mother to celebrate the vulnerability and magic of their bodies in both still photography and film formats.

Through a series of highly-produced self-portraits in Sisters of the Moon, Basu places her body in a dystopian, fictional landscape on the frontline of climate change.

The power of these works led the International Center of Photography to honor Basu with the 2023 Infinity Awards: Contemporary Photography & New Media Award.

Basu said the power of her work comes from channeling her personal experience. 

“Everything I've ever gone through in my life has been directly propelled into the work I make,” she said. “I'm just someone who navigates the world around addressing injustice and tries to disrupt power wherever I can.”

Published: Mar 29, 2023

Photography's a true alignment of your mind, your eyes and your soul. When all three come together, the real picture and the magic happens. - Poulomi Basu


Poulomi Basu's Images


Everything I've ever gone through in my life has been directly propelled into the work I make. All the works are in dialogue with each other. They all address ideas of intersectional feminism and environmental justice. - Poulomi Basu


Extras from Poulomi Basu's Interview


Credits

A film by
Commissioned by
Poulomi Basu
Photography
CJ Clarke
Cinematographer
Director, Editor & Producer
Editor & Producer

Special Thanks: Caroline Vigneron, Stephanie Adams and David E. Little

This film was made possible with the generous support of Harbers Studios.


2023 ICP Infinity Awards Recipients


About the ICP Infinity Awards

Since 1985, the International Center of Photography has recognized outstanding achievements in photography with its prestigious Infinity Awards. The awards ceremony is also ICP’s primary fundraising benefit, with its revenues assisting the center's various programs.

Harbers Studios commissioned MediaStorm, on behalf of ICP, to create a short film about each of the recipients to screen at the awards ceremony and to display online. The films pay tribute to the contributions of each artist to the craft and field of photography and demonstrate ICP's commitment to them.

As a privately funded nonprofit arts and education organization, ICP depends in large part on friends such as you for support. Your generosity is vital to ICP as it continues to grow and succeed in its mission: to present photography's extraordinary power to the public.

There are many ways to give to ICP: Donate to the Annual Fund, create a scholarship, sponsor exhibitions and education programs, contribute to the Collection, or make a planned gift.


MediaStorm's Infinity Award Productions

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