Updated On: 18 December, 2013 07:45 AM IST | | Kiran Mehta
Artist Aishwarya Arumbakkam, challenges the portrayal of stalking in Indian cinema as a necessary mean to gain affection, by capturing 15 survivors of stalking in her new show titled, Stalked: Scars in Time and Space
At a time when safety and personal space of women in India isbeing questioned in every circle, filmmaker-photographer Aishwarya Arumbakkam voices against stalking -- another aspect ofthis grave concern that goes unnoticed most of the time. In her new photo essay, Stalked: Scars in Time and Space, the artist challenges the cinematic portrayal of stalking, hence, its acceptance as the only means to earn one’s affection.

Photographs from the photo essay, Stalked: Scars in Time and Space by artist Aishwarya Arumbakkam