Poetic Symmetry
Photographer Ishaq Madan’s 2021 image of Bahraini skateboarders went viral when it was picked up by New York’s MoMA. Today, his practice is more cinematic.
Originally published in Hadara Magazine, issue 11
With his ghutra afloat, agal suspended in midair, and arms outstretched like wings, the skater in Shabab Al Mustaqbel became an overnight viral sensation when his image was shown in New York City subway stations in 2022. It was not his identity that captured people’s imagination but what he represented. In a single frame, Bahraini photographer Ishaq Madan had captured the raw and sometimes rebellious energy of youth in an often-misunderstood culture.
The idea for the photograph was planted a year earlier when Madan was studying at Nottingham University in the UK. He read that back home a street in Madinat Isa, in the northeast of the island, had been renamed Bahraini Youth Avenue.
“I immediately saw the photograph I wanted to take,” Madan says. “When I returned home, I reached out to some friends, and we headed to the avenue. It was fun; we were hanging out, waiting for sunset as it was during Ramadan, and I shot a few images. They came out exactly as I imagined. It felt like I was a director filming a movie and everything clicked into place.”
The incongruity of skateboarders in Gulf national dress against the backdrop of a sign that reads “Bahraini Youth”, and the long shadows of late afternoon, was a dream combination. When Madan posted it on Instagram, he used the hashtag #MoMAPhotoClub, an open call for submissions from New York’s Museum of Modern Art. To his surprise, a few months later the image was selected and posted on the museum’s social channels, website and on digital screens in New York City subways. He began receiving messages from across the region. Members of Bahrain’s royal family posted of their pride in seeing a slice of the island on display in New York.
“When I found out I was mind blown,” Madan says. “It felt surreal, and it was also super important because I was reflecting a different side to our culture.” The success of this photo reveals a part of Madan’s practice he calls “fishing”. He composes the frames he wants to capture in his imagination and then searches for them in the world around him. “It gives you a focal point, like a fisherman who stays in a single place for hours to catch a single fish,” he explains. “In the case of Shabab Al Mustaqbel I caught a big one.”
The photograph was also the end of a phase of his practice during which he searched for social-media friendly, potentially viral, images. After that, he moved deliberately into the poetic, cinematic style that he is known for today. “I am now more interested in liminal spaces where there are traces of human interaction and where shape, form and shadow play a role,” he says. “I’m also interested in capturing the fragility of memory, and documenting not just moments but eras that will disappear into history.”
This is most fittingly captured in Odd One Out, a mini-series Madan shot in Bahrain National Museum in May 2022. Using a tripod, he set up frames where angles and shadows made interesting patterns with the pale travertine marble building against a washed-out sky. Madan himself appears in playful poses, something that continues to define his practice but is also derived from his conceptual narrative. “The sense of curiosity in the images is symbolic of childhood but also references the school trip to the museum that every Bahraini child experiences. When I went to the museum to photograph it, I was trying to interact with this collective memory, which is almost a rite of passage for children of my generation.”
Madan often speaks of intentionality behind his works, but this is not to suggest that he constructs his scenes, rather that he waits patiently for the scene that he has visualised. Instead of something forced, he considers himself having learned a fluidity to life that brings more poetic symmetry to his already cinematic photographs.
He is also passionate about showcasing the nuances of Bahraini life, which are so often unseen and misunderstood. “We are always in transition in Bahrain, socially, culturally and now even geographically as they try to expand the island with land-reclamation projects,” Madan says. “I often question the things that get lost when we change so quickly. Traditional architecture, cultures and even traditional ways of thinking are considered outdated.
“With my photography, I capture moments and traditions that change and disappear. I’m fascinated by the temporary nature of life and when I eventually publish a book, it will be my contribution to the cultural history of my home country.”