I was in Kolkata. I was wandering around College Street, in the Bowbazar area. I was looking for some old National Geographic magazine. On a chair, from an old bookstore, as if forgotten, a cover of a photobook caught my attention. A woman with her shirt off. A white paper modestly hid the naked saints. I flipped through the book and thought, "Wow, the photo report is amazing!" That's how I discovered Mary Ellen's book "Falkland Road: Prostitutes of Bombay" which I bought for 400 rupees. Falkland Road is a masterpiece because of its honest portrayal of the lives of prostitutes in the red-light district of Mumbai.
The book showed raw images of street prostitutes and brothels taken between October 1978 and January 1979 in Falkland Road in Mumbai. Mary Ellen Mark has succeeded in making a humanistic and very intimate book. Like photographer Henri Cartier Bresson who photographed the frolics of lesbian prostitutes in Mexico in 1934 (see photo "The spider of love"), Mary Ellen Mark also photographed prostitutes while they were having sex with their clients.
If Bresson took the pictures without warning, Mary Ellen Mark she had been able to negotiate the sex shots. During his time in Falkland Road, Mary Ellen Mark developed close relationships with many women, prostitutes and transvestites. There was eroticism in Bresson's pictures, not at Mary Ellen Mark's. The nude portraits Mark has captured evoke a sense of worry rather than sexual stimulation. The portraits of Munni, 15 ord Putla, 13, give a glimpse into the dark lives of these young girls.
This book shows the misery under the saturated colours of the red brothel lamps. Falkland Road remains for me one of the greatest photo essay books. It is prominently displayed on my shelf among the books of Ronny Sen, Raghu Rai and Raghubir Singh. I consult him often. There is so much humanity in this book...