We’re all in this together

  • Dates
    2020 - 2020
  • Author
  • Topics Contemporary Issues, Documentary, Social Issues
  • Locations Cormeilles-en-Parisis, Bengaluru

“We are all in this together” is a photo essay based on my journey from France to India during the time of lockdown due to the COVID 19 pandemic situation.

In this series of work, I am trying to document the current state of forced social alienation of mankind.

The time now feels surreal. Countries are chaotic, people are scared and confused, politics has taken a different turn, but still in all this chaos and suffering all of us seem to share similar feelings and emotions. The feeling of isolation in my surroundings, the emptiness of otherwise lively places and my personal journey through all of this, across two continents and demographics. In some ways, the fear of an uncertain future or the forced imposition of social alienation and isolation binding us in a common thread of we are all in this together. The act of photography became my only way to be connected to the emotions of the people around me in these difficult times. The series starts from my apartment in Paris, trying to capture what I can see within my limits from a window. The unusually lonely streets of Paris and the airport. I saw people from other apartments waving at me. Eight months of living in the same studio, nobody ever spoke to me and suddenly this one day, someone waves at me. It gave me hope that we are all in this together, a kind of camaraderie.

I took pictures of the empty rooms that were visible, streets of Paris that were never so empty.

Where did ‘they’ all go? This image of Paris was heartbreaking for me. I had to leave Paris in a

hurry. It felt sad to leave Paris. This is not how I imagined my departure would be. So, here I was at the airport. People sitting on the ticket counter keeping distance or just away from a crowd, to

avoid contact and maintaining distance was a very new experience. I started photographing their

feeling of uncertainty, fear, suspicion and maybe a dash of hope to be homebound. Landing at

home was no different. The feeling of uncertainty was so strong that the atmosphere itself feels

lonely and cold. Once I reached home, I was immediately under self-isolation for fourteen days as

part of the standard quarantine process. Stuck in a room, the camera was an obvious choice of my window to the outside. Taking photos of people, of surroundings and the overall shroud of peace and tranquillity obscuring the feelings of uncertainty and concern.

We’re all in this together by Shruti Mukherjee

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