narratives in time

Photo Essay by Saurav Das

“We are like children rear’d in shade Beneath some old world abbey wall Forgotten in a forest glade, And secret from the eyes of all.”
– Matthew Arnold

A childhood routine unfolds by the banks of the Ganges, where urchins frolic amongst the waves, unperturbed by the common din. Growing up by the muddy banks, the dearth of four walls and a roof, they turn to the river as their perpetual playmate. Personified, the river is deemed a guardian and infallible time-keeper. As sure as the tides, the regimen plays itself out tirelessly, with these children revelling in their buoyant imagination. They set sail, guided by fervor alone, on reams of foam for boats. The steady ripples soothe their calloused ankles, as the children flit in and out of the frothy waves; with the river patiently bearing witness to it all. A surging force of mirth, that reminds the casual observer of a long forgotten boyhood.

Volume 09

clay | chlorophyll | crimson

Grass is green where you water it. LC’s words float along over Misch’s guitar. It’s a phrase that feels so obvious, and I’m sure those who tend to gardens know this more than most, but it seems to land more than before. The impact noticeable, memorable, echoing through my being. Perhaps we’re ingrained to think it’s greener elsewhere. This patch is the problem and not whether we’re watering it. The key is in the watering. How we go about this practice is what defines our patch of grass. No matter where we go, our patch is, perhaps, the same. Some attributes and characteristics have been changed but the essence is the same: Us.

Stepping into Volume 09 of imprint, marks our third year. I am learning that this patch of green that we have been tending to for the last several years will mould, shift, and sculpt. This depends on how we water it and allow it to take its own shape. It has already happened in wonderfully unexpected ways. There is only so much structure or shape we can predetermine. Beyond that, it will absorb what it needs and reject all that is unnecessary. And perhaps, in this practice, we are changed. Our grass is watered as we water that of our writing, our image making, our practice, our magazine.

From light to dark, rigid to supple, new to old, there is so much in between that is bright and vibrant and unexpected. The practice of our magazine has focused on being open to what we receive; being open to deeply listening to what is shared; being open to work taking us to new journeys. This volume, and this year, will be no different. We will continue tending to it as we have done, learning along the way, from past seasons and present ones.

And yet, I know it will be entirely different.
But still.
It will be watered.