Pranlal Patel


Pranlal Karamshibhai Patel was a photographer from Gujarat, India. He had career spanning eight decades.

Biography

Patel was born in Keshiya. Patel received training in photography starting in 1932 from Balwant Bhatt and Ravishankar Raval, initially using a box camera. He later used cameras such as the Super Ikonta, Rolleiflex, and Nikon.
His work is primarily in black and white photography and is described in terms of art as belonging to the pictorial style, which emphasizes delicate emotional expression and prioritizes beauty, making it appealing to the general public. Patel's photographs gained widespread recognition in numerous popular and prestigious magazines and exhibitions in Gujarat, India, and internationally due to this artistic approach.
Patel extensively documented rural life in India, its historical buildings, and its natural beauty through his photography from 1933 to 1989, earning him numerous national awards. He also received international accolades in 1942, 1964, 1966, and 1976. In 2013-14, an exhibition of his photographs, titled Refocusing the Lens: Pranlal K. Patel's Photographs of Women at Work in Ahmedabad, was held at Hamilton College in New York State, USA.
Beyond documenting the lives of ordinary citizens, Patel is also remembered for his photographs of prominent Indian leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, and Sardar Patel.
Patel established the Patel Photo Studio in 1945 opposite Ahmedabad Town Hall. Throughout his long career, he mentored numerous photographers. He also played a key role in promoting photography education and its organized institutional structure by founding the Niharika Club of Photography in Ahmedabad in 1939 and the Camera Club of Karnavati in Ahmedabad in 1980.
He died on 18 January 2014 in Ahmedabad.

Awards and recognition