“This album is a photographic gesture. It is in the spirit of those intrepid British travel writers like Lady Stanhope who
used words and a sketchbook to record their impressions. I don’t think you can ever capture or explain India, but during
my three weeks exploring a fraction of this multifarious, miraculous country I discovered a world as vivid and refined,
as complicated and intensely coloured as an eighteenth-century Mughal miniature. Here was the shifting animation of
life itself, the celebration of humanity and the longing of the soul for the divine in every small act of kindness. Every day
is a festival, every day is a death.” Amanda Harlech
Travelling in India is Amanda Harlech’s photographic record of her travels from Delhi to Mumbai. This is not documentary
photography, but rather an elegant suite of confessional impressions – of people, landscapes, markets, temples, colours
and textures. The book gives shape to aesthetic and emotional responses that resist definition, and suggests in Harlech’s
words, “ the vibrancy and improvised genius of India, alive with prescience, disquiet, grace and yearning”.
Writer and stylist Amanda Harlech was born in 1959 in London. After studying English literature at the University of Oxford,
Harlech became a fashion editor at Harpers & Queen. She subsequently worked with John Galliano for twelve years
and today is a consultant for Karl Lagerfeld.weiterlesen