(Ernest Pillay)
A collection of evocative colour photographs by Durban
teacher Ernest Pillay, now on display at the Durban Art Gallery, captures the
horror, fear, destruction and majesty of the earthquake in Napal in 2015.
Entitled BC: Through
the Lens of Love, Fear and Faith – the photographs document the direct
aftermath of the earthquake from the vantage point of the Everest Base Camp.
Pillay’s photographs journal his extraordinary first-hand experience of the
earthquake – capturing both the physical enormity and his intrinsically
personal response to this phenomenal destructive act of nature.
Pillay, who teaches design at Ganges Secondary, was
travelling to Tibet with his wife with the intention of climbing Everest. His
wife suffered from severe altitude sickness and was sent via helicopter to
hospital, leaving Pillay to continue to the assent with his guide, alone.
He was in a mountain cabin at the Tokla Pass with the earthquake
struck. He was physically unharmed, but profoundly moved by his experience when
the earthquake shook the mountains, rained down boulders, slush and mud, and
transformed the landscape into a sight reminiscent of an eerie desolate
moonscape.
BC: Through the Lens
of Love, Fear and Faith is Pillay’s first solo exhibition. The photographs
chronicle the experience – swirling snow; damaged mountain tracks; crumbling
buildings – the enormity and extent of the quake and its impact on the mountain
and the village are captured in Pillay’s visual essay.
There will be a walkabout with the artist on April 16 at
10h30. Entry is free and all are welcome!
BC: Through the Lens
of Love, Fear and Faith can be seen at the Durban Art Gallery until April 24.
DAG is open seven days a week: Monday to Saturday from 08h30 until 16h00 and
Sundays from 11h00 until 1600. Entry is free and all are welcome.
For more information, contact the Gallery on 031 311 2264 /
9 or Jabu.Mngwengwe@durban.gov.za
(weekdays). DAG is on the second floor of the magnificent Durban City Hall
building; enter opposite the Playhouse.