Updated On: 30 September, 2018 10:05 AM IST | | Nasrin Modak Siddiqi
Zubin Balaporia's photography exhibition explores how he listens to his pictures

Zubin Balaporia
When veteran musician Zubin Balaporia was first introduced to "serious photography" by his friend Subir Chatterjee, he found it to be as uplifting as music. "I've always looked at music in a visual sense and so, I 'hear' photography as a natural extension of the way I 'see' music," says Balaporia, who has been with the famed rock band Indus Creed, for the last 30 years. Since then, the keyboardist and music composer has ventured into Amazon, Siberia, jungles of Laos, and the Arctic Circle with his camera, shooting photographs that document his strange encounters with killer ants, baby pythons, angry tarantulas to frozen lakes and racing huskies at -32 degree celsius.
Balaporia will now be displaying these photographs at his maiden exhibition at the lights and furniture store, BARO. "You can't shoot great photographs sitting in your apartment in Mumbai. You have to get out and get your feet wet and your hands dirty," says the musician, of his work.
Srila Chaterjee, founder of BARO, says she "loved the stories that Balaporia's pictures told and the light he captured". "My absolute favourite is a snake," says Chaterjee. "Zubin's wife Tanu and friend Charu were very involved in his journey. We all looked at the images together and tried to curate a collection that looked harmonious," she adds.