Ray's photograph in black and white considered to be a masterpiece has a story behind it, reveals Rai.
"He lay down on the same bed, smoking his pipe, on which his heroine was sitting and I took some pictures from the front.
"Then I moved towards the other side from where you could only see his back and I realized the lighting was very dramatic. You could see the adjoining room through the door and there were spectacular shadows falling on the wall," says the photographer.
Apart from portraits of film personalities and celebrities captured in shining black and white in their most candid expressions, the book also contains a compilation of Rai's best photographs of people. The pictures, he says, were taken for specific magazines or newspaper assignments and as Rai says have happened as "a result of spontaneous magic."
"When I take a person's portrait, I am trying to capture the aura of that person. I am trying to get the truth of that person to emerge in the photographs," he says.
national accolades including the Padma Shri, describes images of people in black and white vividly and refers to shoot pictures in the same shades.
"I prefer to take portraits in black and white. Colour makes for very average portraits. In black and white, the grey tones, highlights and contrasts that you are able to create enable you to bring out the strength of the expression in a person's eyes or face," he writes.
Rai describes his interest to click ordinary people and mentions some of the public figures which he enjoyed photographing.
"I suppose my all time favorite among people I have shot is Dalai Lama. I have never met God but I have no hesitation in saying that Christ/Buddha/Nanak must have been like Dalai Lama," Rai writes while describing his passion to shoot the Dalai Lama.
Rai does not detest the new "selfie" phenomenon, but describes it as only mere "fun".
"Today, unfortunately, the age of the selfie has destroyed the art of portrait photography," he writes.
The images in the book are not only asserting but tries to stamp themselves immediately on the viewer's gaze.
Rai wraps up his compilation of portraits asking the viewer to look for the essence of whichever person has been photographed, rich or poor, famous or anonymous.
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