“There was no specific sports publication those days, and I wasn’t representing any newspaper as well, so I wasn’t allowed to enter the stadium to cover cricket. I would go there every day to seek permission to enter the stadium, along with a fellow photographer.
“After struggling for a month they let us enter the main gate and after I offered to cover the events for free and give data to the Pakistan Cricket Board before leaving the stadium.
“That was March 2005, a jam packed stadium for a domestic Twenty20. I still remember the aura and enthusiasm of the cheering crowd,” he smiles.
A good number of photographers from leading national and international publications was covering the event. Most of them left after making a few clicks but Imran stayed there till the last ball, watching every moment through the lense.
‘Agha Akbar, famous sports editor, was impressed by my work, and he called me to his office. Later, he got my work published in a national daily. That’s how I started working as a professional sports photographer and earned my living from this profession till the end of international sports in Pakistan after the attack on Sri Lankan Cricket team,” he narrates.
He is a frequenter to the rural Punjab to cover traditional games like tent pegging, bull race and kabbadi.
‘I love the cheerful environment, as it gives me energy to keep going.”
Hi sighs that regional sports are dying. There are no sponsors for them.
“I always get mesmerised by the energy of the rural folks which gives adorable images,” he said.
His works have been published in various Pakistani and international publications. He participated in numerous group shows and has been acknowledged in photography competitions in Pakistan and abroad.
He is grateful to his fellow photographer Umair Ghani and sculptor Khaleequr Rehman for being instrumental in developing the skills and aesthetic understanding of the images. He is gifted with a sense of composition and a sound understanding of contrast and light. The kinetic element of the scenes remains the mainstay of his candid photographs.
While exposing ordinary landscapes with infra red technique, he transforms mundane landscapes into surrealistic images.
Imran loves playfulness both in the life and the photography. He is brave enough to exercise his freedom and is skilled enough to express it well in photographs. He catches his subjects at the peak of their joyful action and makes them a treat to vision. These happy scenes have sometimes a shade of seriousness, a deceptive darkness, showing a polyphonic aspect, but very well synchronised to make a stunningly beautiful image.
Published in Dawn, September 25th, 2016