From Dyslexic Child  To Ace Lens Person

From Dyslexic Child To Ace Lens Person

Uncategorized

Amazing Journey of Assavri Kulkarni

By Pravin K Sabnis

She was born on this day in 1980 to Chitra and Vivek (Bala) Kandalgaonkar in Betim village on banks of Mandovi River in Goa. The family was into fishing and boat building.
Her father was strict yet broad minded who taught her to drive at 14 but never gave the car to drive until she bought her own. He would wake children at 4am to study and swim. She swam for the state at one point of time.
Her childhood was a struggle as a dyslexic child. She had difficulty in studying but parents or teachers did not understand her predicament. She hated school because of the disconnect.
All she internalised was experience of crossing the river by ferry and walking to Mary Immaculate school in Panjim everyday, ice cream factory on the way, eve teasers near Church Square, coming home to forcefully eat non veg food which she didn’t like.
She found solace in art and drawing. She kept staring at her river searching for answers to flowing questions. By age 8, she had started cooking food. Living in a joint family brought on negative strokes from all kinds of insensitive and abusive persons. She was close to her grandmother and father but it was a struggle to have simple things in life despite being in a financially strong family.
The real challenge started when she announced decision to join Art college. Her father wanted her to be a chartered accountant. She told him that she could not understand numbers. Unable to convince him, she rebelled and joined Art College with money borrowed from a neighbour. Her father was livid and stopped talking to her for over a year. Each day was tearful and difficult.
She was in top 6 which gave her privilege to select photography as specialisation. She needed a camera or would have to let go of photography. At age 16, she did a modeling assignment and short interviews at All India radio, sold photographs clicked with her friend’s camera to earn first 10,000 rupees. That was not enough to buy a camera but the seller Piyush Shah gave her time to pay.
She won first award in photography competition organised by Goa Heritage Action Group. Besides 3000 rupees and lots of recognition, her father reconciled and accepted that he had erred. She kept winning awards in photography at national and state tourism awards.
At 16, she met Nirmal Kulkarni at college. He was impressed by her love for animals and of course the delicious food she carried in her tiffin. They explored nature together, climbed peaks of goa and trekked in the forests. The friendship turned into a partnership for a lifetime.
In final year of college, she stood second in University with a silver medal and national recognition of Vilas Bhende Award for photography. She started commercial shoots for hotel industry alonside fashion and portait assignments. In a men’s world she was first woman photographer in the commercial sector in Goa.
Her first national fashion magazine shoot came from Sucheta Potnis for Kingfisher magazine. She shot for them for 9 years including Verve, Elle Man’s world shoot, Rolling Stone, People, Mint, NCG, BBC food and local Goan publications.
She was part of jury for primary round of Femina Miss India and other competitions. She regularly taught photography to kids and adults and lectures at many colleges.
At 24, she married Nirmal and continued their passion for travel and nature. At 27 she got into yoga and that become her routine. It powered her physically as well as mentally and challenged limitations of conditioning. It was the right time to pass on the positive nurturing to a child.
Her first coffee table book Markets of Goa was published by Department of Art and Culture. The delivery of 8 years of photo documentation as a book and her daughter happened in same month in 2015.
Multitasking and independence made her decide to nurture her daughter with Nirmal. Their work took a back stage but it was worth it. In 2018 she published her second book on photography ‘Light on Photography’ published by Sapna Sardessai’s Printers Devil. It is a guide book for students of photography and includes articles she wrote for Navhind Times.
Her connection with food came from her grandmother who introduced her to markets and cafes in Panjim. She keeps researching and experimenting with organic cuisine. Her recipes on her food channel Assavri’s kitchen are followed by many on social media. She plans to open her organic cafe soon.
She worked over 2 years on her next book on Kunbis as well as a small hand book on her experience in parenting and kid’s tiffin recipes for new mothers. She worked on an international art exhibition of her Black and White drawings in pen and ink.
Besides creating new recipes, her hobbies include travel to less travelled places, playing cricket, growing rice and veggies, spending time with nature and living by sustainable choices. She is off chemicals and stopped using soap, creams, shampoos for last 3 years.
She created her own brand of body wash and hairwash under name Curcuma which is completely plant based. She has always been plastic free, carrying her steel dhabba to restaurants to carry back leftovers. They have no television in the house and use the time in better ways.

Search

Back to Top