2015 – Ongoing — Pokhran, India
About this series
The project When Buddha Stopped Smiling documents the human and environmental aftermath of the 1974 and 1998 nuclear tests conducted in Pokhran, a township in the north-western state of Rajasthan, India, where a quiet desert became a stage for power, pride, and paradox. It delves into the micro-histories of local communities, revealing stories of resilience, loss, and the constant fear of invisible nuclear radiation. Through portraits, landscapes, and symbolic visual narratives, the work captures the fragile interplay between memory, land, and the human condition.
Rooted in long-term engagement, the project unfolds through listening, trust, and shared time with the people who live in the shadow of these tests. These images resist closure; they sit with uncertainty, reflecting how radiation exists not as a visible wound, but as a lingering presence that shapes bodies, emotions, and futures.
The photographic process itself becomes a metaphor for exposure and erasure. The work attempts to visualize what cannot be photographed directly: contamination, fear, and inherited trauma. The landscape is treated not as a backdrop, but as a witness – its textures and scars holding memories that official histories often overlook. When Buddha Stopped Smiling is not about proving causality or offering resolution. It is an act of bearing witness, holding space for voices that remain unheard, and questioning what progress means when its consequences continue to unfold long after the dust has settled.
Photographer: Chinky Shukla
Nationality: Indian
Based in: New Delhi, India
Website: www.chinkyshukla.in
Instagram: @chinky_shukla
Chinky Shukla is a documentary photographer based in New Delhi, India. Her work explores the themes of cultural assimilation, human condition, memory and the environment. The majority of her projects are long form photo stories looking through the layers, documenting lives, building relationships, gaining trust, using her camera to amplify important stories.
She is the recipient of National Geographic Explorer Grant, 2022
Awards & Exhibitions:
Nominated for Leica Oskar Barnack Award, 2023
Stadtische Galerie Nordhorn, Germany, 2021
Kawasaki Peace Museum, Japan, 2021
India Photo Festival, Hyderabad, 2021 and 2015
Nominated for Joop Swart Masterclass, World Press Photo. 2014
Recipient of Public Prize in 10th Days Japan International Photojournalism Awards, 2014
Picture of the year award in National Press Photo contest, Media Foundation of India, 2013
Second prize in photo story category of National Press Photo contest, Media Foundation of India, 2013
First prize in All India Environmental Journalism competition, organized by Indo-German Environment Partnership Programme (IGEP), 2013
Nominated for Prix Pictet award, 2013
“Jadugoda: The Nuclear Graveyard” at the Delhi Photo Festival, 2013
“Jadugoda: The Nuclear Graveyard” in the International Uranium film festival, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 2013
“Jadugoda: The Nuclear Graveyard” at the Modern Art Museum, Rio de Jeneiro, Brazil, 2013
“Jadugoda: The Nuclear Graveyard” in the Uranium film festival, Delhi, 2013
Honorable Mention from PIEA, USA in the Single Image Category, 2009
Exhibited in Photographer’s Guild of India Exhibit – A, 2007
Exhibited in Photo Fair, Mumbai, 2007