[Artist Max Pinckers has
tackled arranged marriage, Bollywood romance, and a team of vigilantes who
protect endangered lovers in a rich and elusive photobook]
By Sean O’Hagan
Love and marriage, Indian-style ... a scene from Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty by Max Pinckers. |
The subject is love and
marriage, Indian-style – both the extravagant imagery of Bollywood romance and
the vexed topic of arranged marriage. Pinckers, a 26-year-old Belgian artist,
spent four months travelling in India, shooting – and staging – the images of
Will They Sing Like Raindrops … (The project won him first prize in this year’s Photographic
Museum of Humanity competition.)
On
first glance, it seems like a set of almost randomly sequenced images: couples
relaxing, studio portraits, still lives, landscapes, lonely hearts newspaper
ads, found images of posters and romantic inscriptions, and dramatic news
stories.
“The main function of the
Love Commandos,” writes Hans Theys in his
introduction to the book, “is to allow people to do this in safety and in
accordance with the laws of India, and to prevent honour killings happening to
the young couples.”
Singular style ... a still from Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty. |
Culturally fraught ... Pinckers plays with Indian culture’s
extreme notions of romance – Bollywood escapism versus violent recrimination.
The
straight reporting and dramatic description that runs though the news report is
revealing, not least because it could be the plot of a Bollywood romance.
(There is even a happy ending – the Love Commandos organised the couple’s
wedding, thereby legalising their status, despite the families’ opposition.)
Rather
than approach this culturally fraught issue as reportage or documentary,
Pinckers walks a tightrope between the real and the fictional. The result is a
layered narrative that plays with Indian culture’s extreme and conflicting
notions of romance: Bollywood escapism versus the reality of young couples
escaping the confines – and sometimes violent recrimination – of family, tribe
and society.
Pinckers’s
poetic vision has a density that makes it wonderfully elusive, or frustratingly
so. (Why the opening image of a tower of ice in a room?) The series on the Love
Commandos, alongside touchingly intimate shots of couples relaxing in safety,
would make for a more direct photobook, but that is not Pinckers’s style.
Instead, his narrative is both obvious and tangential, detached and controlled.
The deadly serious and the kitsch sit side-by-side, as do the deftly observed
and the highly stylised. His colour suggests film stills or the warmth of old
Kodachrome; his scenarios seem real yet filmic.
Sitting
between conceptual and documentary, while upending expectations of each,
Pinckers is still emerging, but his already singular style draws you in.
Bemusing and captivating, Will They Sing Like Raindrops or Leave Me Thirsty has
become a book I return to like a puzzle.