Aditya Arya Archive is one of the earliest photographic archives in India, engaged in the digitizing, documentation, annotation, restoration and preservation of photographic material of archival significance in India. Aditya Arya Archive is led by Aditya Arya, who is an eminent commercial photographer.
History
The Aditya Arya Archive began with the historical collection of photojournalistKulwant Roy, presented to Aditya Arya. Roy was among the handful of photojournalists in India who documented the eventful years immediately before and after independence. He was a close friend of the Arya family and left his surviving photographic negatives and prints to Aditya Arya. These prints and negatives remained forgotten in boxes for nearly 23 years after his death, until their inheritor Aditya Arya, began restoring and cataloguing them. The archive included many unpublished pictures of national leaders and events of the Indian pre and post-independence era and were brought to the public domain after the establishment of the Aditya Arya Archive. One of the outcomes of the unearthing and restoration process of the archive was that many images from the last years of British rule and the early decades after India's independence, which were reprinted over the decades and credited to random journalists, turned out to be Roy's work and have now been duly acknowledged. One of many such images is the iconic 1939 photograph of Mohandas K. Gandhi and Ali Jinnah in a heated argument, which has now been credited to Roy by Getty Images. Many historians believe that the archive may shed light on the key moments in India's independence movement.
Rare and iconic images from the Aditya Arya Archive
Taking a leap with the Kulwant Roy collection, the Aditya Arya Archive released a book, History in the making – The visual archives of Kulwant Roy, in April 2010. The book has been published in hardback by HarperCollins Publishers India Ltd. Aditya Arya and Indivar Kametkar worked together on the book for nearly three years, putting together text and images to form a compelling visual narrative. It is a visual documentary on the history of India from the 1930s to 1950s and some of Kulwant Roy's original captions and the imprint of his own rubber stamp on several pages. The forward has been written by India's Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh.
The Great Divide: India and Pakistan, a book which contained some images from the Kulwant Roy collection, was launched at the India International Center, New Delhi in May 2009.
The Gandhi Memorial Center, Washington, D.C. held an exhibition of photographs from History in the making – The visual archives of Kulwant Roy, sponsored by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations and in cooperation with the Indian Embassy of India in October 2009.
Soon after the book launch of History in the making – The visual archives of Kulwant Roy, The Piramal Art Gallery at Mumbai's National Center for Performing Arts hosted an exhibition of Roy's works in April 2010.
Where Three Dreams Cross, 150 Years of Photography from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, at the Whitechapel Gallery in London in April 2011, displayed some selected images from the Kulwant Roy collection.
Book launch and exhibition of History in the making – The visual archives of Kulwant Roywas organized at Teen Murti, New Delhi in April 2010. Mrs. Gursharan Kaur, wife of India's Prime Minister, was invited as a special guest at the occasion.
Book launch and exhibition of History in the making – The visual archives of Kulwant Roytook place at Morlaix France in September 2010.
An exhibition of Roy's works title 'The Visual Archives of Kulwant Roy' was held at the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi which was inaugurated on 14 November 2012.
One of the outcomes of the process of restoration of the historical photographic collections is the India Photo Archive Foundation, which was established in the year 2009 The India Photo Archive Foundation is a Public Charitable Trust engaged in digitising, annotating, and preserving photographic archives.