Dwarika
Das Shrestha
Pioneer
Photographer of Nepal
By
Kashish Das Shrestha, Photos by Dwarika Das
When
ECS asked me to write about my grandfather, late Dwarika Das Shrestha,
I did not realize how difficult it would be. For most of my childhood,
Dashain and other occasional family gatherings were the only times
we would meet. In fact, it wasn’t until my adolescence, when
I started working for KATH 97.9 FM (now IMAGE) in Pako, New Road,
that I found myself visiting him regularly at our family home in
Khichapokhari. Now, three years after his death, I continue to find
out who he was. My grandfather was born to Thakur Das Shrestha and
Hari Devi Shrestha in 1932 and was raised and educated in Darjeeling.
He spent much of his youth there working with his father in the
family shop, Das Studio (established 1927) before moving to Kathmandu
in the early 1960s. Since then, he never really went back to Darjeeling.
Instead, he established the Das Photo Stores in Kathmandu, offering
everything that a photo shop could at that time, including video
and photography classes. It was during those years that he also
helped pioneer the picture postcard industry in Nepal. The last
several conversations I had with my grandfather in 2003, before
I left for school in the USA, and when I returned in March 2004,
were about exhibiting photographs he had taken over the years. In
hindsight, I am surprised at my insistence to exhibit his photos,
especially since at that point I had never seen them myself. Perhaps
I was sure that they were worthy of exhibiting; or maybe it was
just a way in which I was trying to see his works; or perhaps it
was just an excuse for us to work together on something. But, unfortunately,
he died in April 2004, hardly two weeks after finally agreeing to
let me have the photos and select them for an exhibition. The old
leather suitcase covered with dust and full of slides, negatives
and prints came home with me that day. It had been under his bed
for almost a quarter century. Later that night, I spent hours shuffling
through them and realized that in his death, I would find out more
about his life.
He lost his wife to cancer in his ’40s and had himself fought
alcoholism for a while during those years. When he retired he handed
over the photo shop to my father who moved it to Kantipath/Jamal.
By the time I started visiting my grandfather, he had become reclusive,
often reluctant to talk about his past. But sometimes, he would
give in to his inquisitive grandson. He talked about the time he
took photos of Queen Elizabeth during her visit to Nepal in 1961,
and also about being invited to take photos of the Royal families.
But this year, I found out that he had even taken a photo of B.P.
Koirala and secretly distributed it during the Panchayat era (1960s
and ’70s).
He told me of his passion for mountaineering and how he was supposed
to embark on an Everest expedition in the late 1950s, though he
never told me that he and Tenzing Norgay (who climbed Everest with
Hillary in 1953) had been friends. He was present during the inauguration
of the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute (HMI) in Darjeeling in
1954, and was an active member of the institution, taking part in
many of its trainings, including expeditions in January 1955, August
1955 and November 1956. “Had it not been for my mom’s
insistence, I would have gone on that Everest expedition,”
he told me more than once. I recall my grandfather cautioning me
against traditions that don’t make sense, and he didn’t
seem to like the idea of living with regrets or dwelling in the
past. During his last days, his afternoon naps and evening walks
kept him content. But, in his younger days, he enjoyed his large
circle of friends and outings; costume parties, drives, picnics
and travels. I could never understand how he just stopped taking
photos, but “now its your time,” he once said, “I
have lived my moment.”
For the past three years, I have spent countless hours sifting through
my grandfather’s works in an attempt to archive them coherently.It
seems that every time I go through them, I realize something I had
missed before, either about him or the moments in which he lived.
The dream of holding the exhibition was finally realized in August
2007, when ASMAN and Photo Concern of Kathmandu came together in
collaboration with a few other partners, just in time to commemorate
his 75th birth anniversary. It was pure coincidence that the British
Ambassador, who was invited to inaugurate the event, had himself
gotten some photos taken and processed at my grandfather’s
shop in the early ’60s. Several of the visitors who came had
known him longer and perhaps better than I did. They remembered
him as an old friend, and the city they loved, and recalled the
days when they had photographed or walked through Kathmandu together
many decades ago. Some were his classmates, some were fellow Rotarians
and many others just remembered the shop in Darjeeling and in Kathmandu.
Or, they simply knew my grandfather and had fond memories. |
|
|
|

Please contact
our
sales department:
ad@ecs.com.np
or call us at
5528344
|
|
|
|