Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Dream catchers

There’s art everywhere in the hamlet of Khwaabgaon in West Bengal. An initiative by a group of artists is helping villagers here earn more, and opening up the world to their children

- Madhusree Ghosh madhusree.ghosh@hindustant­imes.com

In Khwaabgaon, West Bengal, an art initiative is helping villagers earn and opening up the world to their children

Everything is an art installati­on in Laalbazar, a tribal village of 80 people in Jhargram district, West Bengal. On the walls of the mud houses — painted in bright colours — are scenes of everyday life: goats gazing, tribal dance forms, farmers in an orchard, children at play.

Depicted on one wall is a wedding ritual of this Lodha tribe, where the groom threatens to jump off the roof and the bride says he doesn’t have to take his life as she will be with him forever.

There are exhibition spaces where artefacts are sold, and a workshop where children learn to paint, adults try their hand at sculpture, and women at quilting.

Kolkata-based painter and sculptor Mrinal Mandal has led the transforma­tion of what used to be a regular mud-huts Lodha settlement. He first visited in 2014,

KHWAABGAON IS NOW A TOURIST ATTRACTION. THE VILLAGERS, MOST OF WHOM ARE DAILY WAGE EARNERS, EARN FROM THE SALE OF THEIR CRAFTS TOO

while on a visit to his home town of Jhargram city.

“The village has only one entry and exit. To the rear of it is dense forest. Entering it gave me an enormous sense of peace and positivity,” Mandal said.

The artist had, two years earlier, co-founded the Chalchitra Academy with fellow artist Jayati Banerjee, to promote the dying arts of Bengal.

In Laalbazar, he found a village of impoverish­ed daily wage earners and decided perhaps his art and the art academy could help.

They started small, with free drawing classes for the children. “Two artists from a neighbouri­ng village — painter Rameswar Soren and sculptor Jogeswar Hansda — began to teach.”

Mandal and fellow artists from the academy simultaneo­usly asked if they could paint the walls of the mud houses. “They permitted us to paint one wall first, then three, and then they saw that we were doing something nice.”

By 2018, all the homes were painted. Scholar and writer Shivaji Bandopadhy­ay visited the village and rechristen­ed it Khwaabgaon, or village of dreams, a name that has caught on with the residents. Renowned artist Jogen Chowdhury designed a logo to go with the name. On it are the motifs of the sun, the moon and trees.

The houses are re-made with mud every year, so all the paintings are done over each year too. “We didn’t stop there. We started teaching them crafts as well,” Mandal said.

Artists have stepped up to provide free instructio­n. A popular craft villagers now earn from is the style called Katumkutum, made famous by Abanindran­ath Tagore, where figurines are made from wood, twigs, leaves and roots collected from the forest. Workshops on sculpting, quilting, kantha work, the making of natural dyes are also conducted.

Khwaabgaon has become a tourist attraction and visitors invariably end up buying the crafts as souvenirs. (Products cost between Rs 200 and Rs 1,000.)

“I never thought I would see a time like this,” said resident Sashthi Charan Ahir, 42, a differentl­y abled labourer and now Katumkutum artist. “My children are learning to draw, the women in the family are quilting, my brother is learning to sculpt and I earned Rs 15,000 from my Katumkutum in 2019.”

Painter Saumen Khamrui visited Khwaabgaon last month to hold a workshop on the art of Batik printing. “The best thing about the villagers — male, female, child or adult — is the willingnes­s to learn a new form of art or craft,” he said.

A nursery is now being built to grow Ayurvedic plants and make natural compost, for use and sale by the villagers. “We are also planning to build a small studio here so that artists can come and stay here with the villagers and create art, do a kind of residency,” Mandal said.

Eventually the hope is that art will become the sole source of income for at least some of the families here.

The initiative has been so successful that neighbouri­ng villages are now approachin­g Mandal to do the same for them. “We are planning to start drawing classes in a village about 6km away, called Uranshol. It’s a tribe of Bhil people who are eager to learn from us,” Mandal said.

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 ??  ?? Residents and visitors get together to paint the walls of the mud houses, which are rebuilt each year, in this initiative led by artist Mrinal Mandal. The art depicts scenes from villagers’ lives and cultural elements like dance forms.
Residents and visitors get together to paint the walls of the mud houses, which are rebuilt each year, in this initiative led by artist Mrinal Mandal. The art depicts scenes from villagers’ lives and cultural elements like dance forms.
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 ??  ?? Children stand before a painted sign that says “Khwaabgaon” or village of dreams, a name given to it by the scholar and writer Shivaji Bandopadhy­ay in 2018.
Children stand before a painted sign that says “Khwaabgaon” or village of dreams, a name given to it by the scholar and writer Shivaji Bandopadhy­ay in 2018.
 ??  ?? WATCH artist Mrinal Mandal talk a walk through the village of dreams
WATCH artist Mrinal Mandal talk a walk through the village of dreams

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