Folk Art - Indian Art News https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com News on Modern and Contemporary Indian Art presented by Visions Art Wed, 31 Jan 2018 17:59:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://i0.wp.com/indianartnews.visionsarts.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/cropped-Visions-Art.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Folk Art - Indian Art News https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com 32 32 136536861 The next generation of India’s folk artists is breaking from the traditions of their parents https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/next-generation-indias-folk-artists-breaking-traditions-parents/ https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/next-generation-indias-folk-artists-breaking-traditions-parents/#respond Wed, 31 Jan 2018 17:57:10 +0000 http://www.indianartnews.info/?p=1006 Younger artists are contemporising the forms by filtering them through their experiences of living in a city, and travelling to residencies and art fairs.   “In the beginning, there …

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Younger artists are contemporising the forms by filtering them through their experiences of living in a city, and travelling to residencies and art fairs.

The next generation of India’s folk artists is breaking from the traditions of their parents

 

“In the beginning, there were sky and water,” Japani Shyam, a Gond artist and Jangarh Singh Shyam’s daughter, said on the phone from Bhopal.

One of the most popular creation myths among the Gond tribe, this origin story is key to Japani’s art. It begins with the supreme Gond god Bada Dev creating a crow from the dirt and sweat he rubs off his chest. The crow looks for a place to rest but finding no earth to sit on, he finally spots a perch, only to find it’s the claw of a giant crab. The crab agrees to help the crow find clay for land, and calls the earthworm up from the depths. The earthworm coughs up a bit of clay, which it would otherwise eat. The crow flies back to Bada Dev who tries, and fails, to create land out of this clay. Bada Dev calls upon a spider to weave a web on the water, and then spreads the clay on it. This time, it sticks. There are now sky, earth and water.

Reinterpreting the same story

Japani said she has heard this tale thousands of times though she has never lived in her ancestral village of Patangarh in Madhya Pradesh. She has internalised it, and elements from it appear in her artworks often. As they did in the works of her father, the late pioneering Gond artist Jangarh Shyam. Yet her artworks themselves break away from tradition in a significant way. Jangarh Shyam worked on a range of mediums, from walls to silk screens and paper. The background in his works was almost always white or at least light coloured. “I prefer to work on a black background,” Japani said. “It has become my signature.”

Japani Shyam.
Japani Shyam.

Japani and her brother Mayank Shyam may have learnt Gond art from their father, but they now have strikingly different styles. And works by all four members of the family (Jangarh’s wife Nansukia is also a Gond artist) are set to be a part of on a new website, Tribalartforms.com, which will, from February 8 onwards, offer works by 20 folk artists for sale. The website launch will be part of India Art Fair’s Platform section, which promotes South Asian art. Among other artists represented on TAF will berenowned Warli artist Jivya Soma Mashe and his children Balu Jivya and Sadashiv Soma Mashe.

Rasika Kajaria of New Delhi-based Exhibit320, and Mandira Lamba and Ridhi Bhalla of Blueprint12 Gallery jointly conceptualised TAF and had at least two stated objectives in doing so. First, they wanted to create a “more formalised” channel for showing and selling folk art. Second, to demonstrate that the traditional arts are living, dynamic forms that are evolving in dialogue with changing socio-economic and cultural contexts.

 Japani Shyam.
Japani Shyam.

Where it started

In December, Exhibit320 and Blueprint12 showcased an exhibition called Given Power: From Tradition to Contemporary, to announce the website as well as to suss out interest in folk art. Predictably, the first painting visitors saw on entering Exhibit320 was a work by Jangarh Singh Shyam, who was arguably the most well-known tribal artist from India. As you walked further inside, works by veterans Ram Singh Urveti and Bhuri Bai were juxtaposed with those of next-generation tribal artists Mayank and Japani Shyam. In another section, the gallery hosted works by the Mashe brothers and their father.

To be sure, Mayank and Japani Shyam and Sadashiv and Balu Mashe have made a name for themselves, and been shown in galleries before. Their works have sold on platforms such auction house SaffronArt’s StoryLtd, and at the time of the show, Sadashiv Mashe was on an art residency in Japan. Yet, what Given Power was able to achieve through this juxtaposition of works was to signal how their art vocabulary is different from their famous parents’. How even as there is renewed interest in making tribal and folk arts more mainstream, these artists are contemporising the forms further by filtering them through their experiences of living in a city, and travelling to residencies and art fairs abroad.

Jangarh Singh Shyam.
Jangarh Singh Shyam.

A fine example is an untitled work by Mayank Shyam that pictures an androgynous spider, an important figure in Gondi tradition. Compare this with Jangarh Shyam’s Landscape with Spider, which sold at a Sotheby’s auction for Rs 14.5 lakh in 2010. Where the spider in Jangarh Shyam’s painting is tiny, weaving a small web on a giant tree surrounded by peacocks and grass, Mayank Shyam’s spider is huge, androgynous and resembles a multi-legged god. The colours seem to be bleached from the entire canvas, except a spot of bright blue around the spider itself.

Similarly, Warli painters Sadashiv Soma Mashe and Balu Jivya Mashe are examples of second-generation folk artist. Sadashiv Mashe is known for his intricate renditions. The themes he paints are often the same as his father Jivya Mashe and brother Balu Mashe – there are fish caught in fishing nets and ant hills by the dozens. But Sadashiv Mashe’s canvas is more thickly populated. The scales on the fish and the mesh of the fishing net in which they are caught are somehow tighter in his work. “You have to see them together to appreciate them,” said Kajaria on the opening day of Given Power. “There’s something about their strokes that’s different.”

Mayank Shyam.
Mayank Shyam.

Balu Mashe said in a phone interview from Thane: “My art is like my father’s, with one difference. My akshar (vocabulary) is different.” Balu, the younger of the Mashe brothers, was referring to the basic unit of dots and dashes, and the weight of each line in his art.

Mainstream again

Efforts to bring traditional and folk arts into the mainstream are not new. In the 1970s, Mumbai-based artist Bhaskar Kulkarni met Jivya Soma Mashe. By 1975, Jivya Mashe had his first show at Gallery Chemould and a year later, his work was shown in Paris.

Sadashiv Jivya Mashe.
Sadashiv Jivya Mashe.

Across state boundaries, in Madhya Pradesh in the 1980s, Jagdish Swaminathan, the first director of Bharat Bhavan in Bhopal, had sent out scouts who discovered Jangarh Shyam. Soon after, Jangarh Shyam was invited to paint a wall of the state secretariat. In 1986, the state recognised him by conferring the Shikar Samman award on him and three years later, he was one of the artists in the Magiciens de la Terre show at Centre Pompidou, Paris.

If anything, a major push to promote the tribal and folk arts has come and gone, leaving an imprint in places such as France, which continues to have an annual showcase for folk art. In 2014, Sadashiv made seven murals at India House in Cite Internationale Universitaire de Paris. And some of the biggest collectors of the country’s folk art, from Frenchman Hervé Perdriolle to American Mitchell Crites, are still not Indians.

Given Power 1
Given Power 1

“Efforts [to mainstream folk arts in the 1970s and ’80s] were partially successful,” said Padmaja Srivastava, India coordinator of Duppata, an NGO dedicated to folk art in France. “It definitely brought Indian folk art on the international map by organising various exhibition, [and by] collaborating with well-known museums in Paris and Tokyo and other places. But the approach towards folk art in the Indian market was lukewarm.”

Perhaps the experiment that is Tribal Art Forms has got off to a shaky start. None of the tribal artists represented in the show at Exhibit320 were present on the opening day – an unusual, if not unheard of, thing in a mainstream show. Whether TAF is a commercial success or no, whether it finally manages to mainstream these arts or no, it is a reminder that contemporary folk art is evolving in strange and wonderful ways.

Jangarh Singh Shyam.
Jangarh Singh Shyam.
Sadashiv Soma Mashe.
Sadashiv Soma Mashe.
https://scroll.in/magazine/865993/the-next-generation-of-indias-folk-artists-is-breaking-from-the-traditions-of-their-parents

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Resurrecting the Folk Arts https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/resurrecting-folk-arts/ https://indianartnews.visionsarts.com/resurrecting-folk-arts/#respond Sun, 08 Oct 2017 10:40:08 +0000 http://www.indianartnews.info/?p=950 Asian folk art has long fascinated the West, which is drawn to its intricate tales, myths and traditions. But the value of the artworks are lost on most Indians. …

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Asian folk art has long fascinated the West, which is drawn to its intricate tales, myths and traditions. But the value of the artworks are lost on most Indians.

18th – 20th century porcelain, including pieces from the Dhillon collection. Saffronart, Asian Art, 9 – 10 August 2017.

Photo: Saffronart

In late summer, saffronart.com, an online auction house, hosted a live Asian Art Auction, featuring 18th-20th century Tibetan thangkas and Nepalese pauba paintings based on Buddhist and Hindu iconography.

During the auction, a bronze 20th century art piece from Nepal depicting an eighteen-armed Durga, titled Mahishasuramardini, received a winning bid of $20,856. The artwork shows Durga and her mount, the Lion, proclaiming their power against the Buffalo demon Mahisha. The statute tells a fascinating mythological tale of the fiery goddesses’ fight against the evil.

18th – 20th century porcelain, including pieces from the Dhillon collection. Saffronart, Asian Art, 9 – 10 August 2017. Photo: Saffronart

Elsewhere in Colorado, at the JLF Boulder 2017 — an offshoot of the Jaipur Literature Festival held every year — artists from the Indian Tribal Bheel community displayed artworks that brought alive the folklore, mythology and customs of the lesser known Bheel community.

Asian art has long fascinated the West, which is drawn to its intricate tales, myths and traditions. But the value of the cultural representations in artworks are lost on

most Indians.

Anubhav Nath, curatorial director, of Delhi based Ojas Art Gallery, who was instrumental in bringing the Bheel artists to America, says, “The idea behind bringing these not-so-popularly known art forms from India to other countries is to provide these artists a newer audience that is eager to understand their works.”

“Every year, we choose to bring a different genre from Indian art world. For the past three years we brought Gond, Madhubani and now Bheel art from India. While a lot is happening in India, sometimes many of these art forms do not get the attention they deserve back home, perhaps because people are yet to realize the novelty behind these ideas.”

Amitayus, China_Tibet,18th century. Gold lacquered bronze, 6 in. Saffronart, Asian Art, 9 10 August 2017 . Photo: Saffronart

But the stories are getting increasing global attention. At the ongoing British Ceramics Biennial 2017 (Sep 23- Nov 5) underway at Stoke-on-Trent in England, Warli artists from India are exhibiting their paintings in association with UK based artists and filmmakers, who formed a project, titled Heart:Beat.The project, which actually began from a small artists’ residency in Dahanu, has BCB, Manchester Metropolitan University and The Centre for Environmental Planning and Technology, Ahmedabad partnering.

Warli, a centuries-old art form, which originated in Maharashtra, has now found recognition in some of the leading art galleries around the world, telling often radical stories through its simple technique using cow-dung and mud washed base. The artworks that often represent nature are not just simple depictions of daily chores, but are also representative of modern day emergencies, such as depletion of forests and the need for conservation.

INTERTWINED WORLDS

Perhaps it is these interwoven stories, both historical and modern, often depicted in art works from the region that make them worth discovering for international art houses and galleries. Hugo Weihe, CEO of saffronart.com, says:

Hugo Weihe, CEO Saffronart. Photo: Saffronart

“We’re excited to establish a category of Asian Art with this first sale. This auction included works which are not only rare, with a unique story of collecting behind them, but are also significant as they illustrate Indian influence and the historic exchange of ideas and trade within Asia. It offers new discoveries that open up fresh perspectives.”

He adds, “We plan to establish Asian Art as an annual category, highlighting and celebrating important works from across Asia.”

Anubhav Nath says often artists with their works bring together two worlds, either by providing the dots of the connections that brought the societies together in the past, or by talking about common contemporary problems through an ancient technique.

However, ironically it is the home audiences that sometimes fail to see the message. Often the stories of artists, like their deep-meaning works, speak for themselves. Nath shares the story of a now well-known Gond artist from India: “Bhajju Shyam’s is an inspiring story who rose from the rank of being a security guard to a well-renowned artist. His 2004 book London Jungle Book, received international acclaim. But this artist who was able to showcase his works at the London City Museum and is revered for his work globally, hadn’t had a solo exhibit in India until recently.”

A thangka showing an arhat with guardian kings. Tibet, 18th century. Distemper on cloth, 25.25 x 16.75 in. Saffronart, Asian Art, 9 – 10 August 2017. Photo: Saffronart

Often homegrown talent escape attention locally, perhaps because the form of art in small villages and towns fails to attract the attention of mainstream media.

According to curators, the real Indian art lies in remote corners of cities; often the artisans are themselves unaware of their valuable skills and even more often they lack access to opportunities to connect with the outside world.

Nath says: “We organize an art award every year for which we invite entries from artists across spectrums and often we get artisans who have been quietly doing works of such exceptional quality in some remote corners of the country.”

He says, “Lado Bai, an unlettered Bheel artist who exhibited at Colorado and was also the recipient of Bheel Excellence Award in India earlier in the year, received her award from Sean Anderson, associate director in the department of architecture and design, MOMA, New York.”

According to Nath, it is stories such as these that need to be highlighted in India and then globally for real artists to emerge.

MISSING THE CONTEXT

According to many art observers, art appreciation in India may be lacking because of the limited context of its social understandings. Very often, important art works and structures do not have a background story shared publicly to allow people to feel connected with the story, a gap that many international galleries have been filling effectively.

Bhagoria Mela by Subhash Amaliyar

Early this year, at an exhibit, titled Epic Tales from India, organized by the San Diego Museum of Art, all 90 paintings were accompanied with the texts or books arranged in the context of the original narrative they may have been derived from. The South Asian paintings from the 16th century to the 19th century were beautifully explained through the literature of their time.

However, change in attitude is visible in India too as many photography exhibitions detailing the lives of artisans preserving lesser known arts have been held in major metros recently. Many workshops enlightening the community on art forms have also been initiated both by organizations and by individuals.

Mohan Kumar Varma, one of the few artisans preserving the art of unique paper cutting, called Sanjhi from Mathura in Uttar Pradesh, has been creating contemporary versions of his art to engage with city-bred Indian audiences, most of who are unaware of the dying technique. Varma displayed his works at a recent exhibit in Delhi titled Sanjhi Revisited. He says that even though he is happy that organizations like Delhi Craft Council are supporting him, the government needs to intervene to provide recognition of forgotten old art forms in their own country.

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