Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

WHO MADE THIS SAREE?

Indian designers and their craftspeop­le mostly operate in an anonymous, unequal space. That may be about to change with credit coming their way at last

- Shefalee Vasudev letters@hindustant­imes.com

When 64-year old Rohit Salvi, a Patan Patola master weaver arrived to participat­e at World Ikat Textiles: Ties that Bind, a cross-cultural exhibition, symposium and bazaar held in Delhi a few weeks back, he was turned away from the hotel where he was supposed to stay. There was no reservatio­n for him at the Western Court Hotel, he was informed, never mind the email of confirmati­on from the organisers.

Along with Savan, his 33-year-old nephew, the youngest weaver in the family, Salvi had to check into a small hotel near the railway station. Representa­tives of the World Crafts Council who had co-organised the event with the Delhi Crafts Council and other noted textile and crafts brands, later apologised but Savan says they were hurt at being initially overlooked. Especially as a visual representa­tion of the Shrikar Bhat, an award-winning drape woven by Rohit Salvi was the lead image on all promotiona­l materials for this event. Since 1978, the Salvis who weave Patan’s famous double Ikat Patola, have been honoured with four national awards and two Shilpguru citations.

THE MIDDLEMAN

Far away in the temple town of Nathdwara in Rajasthan, 62-year-old Shyam Sharma, also a 1987 national awardee for reverse painting on glass and an old hand at Pichhwai art, bemoans the fact that artists like him can never directly reach the “kala-premis” (art lovers) of the world, thwarted as they are by gallery owners and middlemen. “I got a national award but no proper platform ever to evolve my art or earnings. One painting takes me 20-25 days to make but earnings depend on negotiatio­ns with middlemen. Sometimes I get as little as ~15,000 a piece even though it sells for ten times the price in city galleries,” says Sharma.

Currently, there is a visible inflection point in India’s design journey. A contempora­ry awakening of sorts surrounds us through travelling shows, seminars, crafts tours, handloom melas, ministry and media engagement­s. Many more people now know about tribal and folk art, the hand-made aesthetic in textile and the dilemmas of the country’s heritage legacy. A movement summed up rather succinctly by Bhopal-based Gond artist Bhajju Shyam: “Five years back we were called craftsmen. Today we are known as contempora­ry artists.”

Yet there is a lot of lopsidedne­ss in the crevices of this evolution when it comes to commercial gains and fame of urban designers compared to village artisans. Indian design is a co-created entity shared by urban design thinkers and rural artisans. Asia’s well-known design guru Rajeev Sethi calls the latter the “skilled poor, the base of the creative community”. They have seldom been credited for their contributi­ons to the nation’s cultural monuments even though it is in collaborat­ion with their skills and underpaid work that sensitised minds trained in design schools have evolved what India at 70, recognises as its design idiom.

CREDIT SHARING

The point is not who invented the wheel or who is more important in the caravan of brand India. Nor is it about diminishin­g the role of design gurus without whom innovation, finesse and recognitio­n would be impossible. But it is about deconstruc­ting the story to reveal its nuances.

More than 43 lakh people are engaged in weaving and allied activities according to the Handloom Census of India of 2009-2010 while 45,000 creations made by 9,000 arti- sans, awardees and retailers were showcased at Textiles India 2017 in Gandhinaga­r this June.

Yet an ambiguous anonymity continues to cloud the “other half”. So while most of us know about Jaipur blue pottery, the jadau jewellery of Rajasthan, handblown glass from Moradabad, Naqashi of Kashmir; recounting the names of master craftsmen or the stars from the younger generation of artisans is hard.

Undoubtedl­y, a clutch of successful designers work with craftsmen in fair and mutually enriching ways. Some bring them to fashion week ramps for visibility, others take them abroad for visual retelling of their skills at internatio­nal design festivals. But only a few over the years have publicly shared the signature with an artisan.

Textile designers Shani Himanshu of 11:11/eleven eleven and Swati Kalsi are among those keen to turn the tide.

With Arvind Limited, Himanshu created 100 per cent Khadi jeans, a line of limited edition indigo dyed denims. Each pair carries the name of the craftspers­on on the label. Kalsi works with female Sujani embroidery artisans from Bihar in interactiv­e workshops to create work on the cusp of art, craft and textiles. “The hand has a brain of its own. It can think of and make surfaces that neither machines nor the human mind can recreate. Each artisan has an individual style of doing the same embroidery,” she says of her “oneof-a -kind pieces”. Kalsi foots the expenditur­e for the travel, stay and boarding of

WHILE MOST OF US KNOW ABOUT JAIPUR BLUE POTTERY OR THE HANDBLOWN GLASS FROM MORADABAD, RECOUNTING THE NAMES OF MASTER CRAFTSMEN IS HARD.

artisans in the city and believes that profitshar­ing models need to be evolved by engagement, time, skill, and risk-taking on the part of artisans.

Beenu Bawa, the brand director of lifestyle brand Goodearth who has made a series of craft films titled Pehchaan (recognitio­n) on the talent of India’s unknown artisans, says it is time the spotlight moves to other crafts beyond weaves. “Artisans are the best representa­tions of the Indian entreprene­urial spirit which is the engine of growth. But we must listen before trying to help them. They crave the respect and freedom of modern artists. They understand market forces and find fair-trade regulation­s insulting,” says Bawa.

Forty years ago, lest insult became injury, Sethi says he requested Kamaladevi Chattopadh­yaya, the leading social reformer of post-independen­ce India to help constitute the ‘Bhule Bisre Kalakaar Cooperativ­e’ for forgotten artists. This was just after the Emergency when bulldozers had razed the mud homes of artists in the Kathputli colony in Delhi. “Anand Gram, a unique arts habitat blending urban and rural ethos for artists relegated to city slums, was imagined. The four decade-long failure to take these projects to their logical conclusion continues to hurt,” says Sethi.

In 1985-86, Sethi curated the Golden Eye exhibition for the Smithsonia­n Museum in the US. It had panels with names and quotes of the 55 contributi­ng craftsmen. A red stone bench made by Sethi with Kesariya Ram, a stone artist from Rajasthan, is now famously a part of the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Likewise, each work at the Jaya He museum jointly carries the name of the Ustaad (the head) of the artisan group with that of Sethi.

Concerns around artisanal signature formed the basic promise of Indian design as envisioned by Chattopadh­yaya and cultural activist Pupul Jayakar, says Ashoke Chatterjee, former director of the National Institute of Design (NID), Ahmedabad, from 1975-2000.

JOINT SIGNATURES

“Incubation of the design process however came later. Acknowledg­ing their work and instilling self-confidence in artisans began with the collaborat­ions between NID fac- ulty and students for craft documentat­ion projects who came from privileged background­s,” says Chatterjee. “Craft is our only hope and this inclusive ethic of joint signature and credit must apply to all interventi­ons,” he says adding that a majority of artisans remain voiceless. “It is an unequal society and while there have been wonderful people and projects, others have exploited them and left them behind.”

PRICE DIFFERENCE­S

Bhajju Shyam for instance sells each of his Gond paintings for ~ 20,000-~ 25,000 from his home studio while city galleries charge upwards of ~60,000, taking their cut which Shyam believes is fair. “We need design gurus to hone our skills and galleries to give us space,” he says. Goodearth says they never negotiate money or fees with an artisan once the sampling is approved. “A yearly order plan is shared for artisans to plan raw material, 30 to 50 per cent is given as advance and the entire order, sometimes even extra, is picked up when ready with no rejections.”

It may be time however to highlight unsung artists alongside flourishin­g city talents. Like Hansiba, a hand embroidery brand named after the first and oldest artisan of SEWA (Self Employed Women’s Associatio­n). Not as patriotic duty or social service but as profession­al ethic and the sturdy market mantra of credit

where due.

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 ?? PHOTO COURTESY: SUNAYANA SINGH ?? (Above) Textile designer Swati Kalsi at an interactiv­e workshop with Sujani craftswome­n of Bihar.
PHOTO COURTESY: SUNAYANA SINGH (Above) Textile designer Swati Kalsi at an interactiv­e workshop with Sujani craftswome­n of Bihar.
 ?? PHOTO COURTESY: GVK ?? Awardwinni­ng Pichhwai artist Trilok Soni working on an artwork for the Jaya He museum.
PHOTO COURTESY: GVK Awardwinni­ng Pichhwai artist Trilok Soni working on an artwork for the Jaya He museum.
 ?? PHOTO COURTESY: SHANI HIMANSHU ?? (Above) Artisans who handstitch­ed Khadi garments for 11:11/eleven eleven.
PHOTO COURTESY: SHANI HIMANSHU (Above) Artisans who handstitch­ed Khadi garments for 11:11/eleven eleven.
 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY ASIAN HERITAGE FOUNDATION. ?? (Top) Padmashree Gangadevi, a Madhubani artist working on a panel for an exhibition, ‘Aditi’, that travelled to the UK and the US. (Above) Design guru Rajeev Sethi working with Odisha artists in 1983 for a Smithsonia­n exhibition.
PHOTOS COURTESY ASIAN HERITAGE FOUNDATION. (Top) Padmashree Gangadevi, a Madhubani artist working on a panel for an exhibition, ‘Aditi’, that travelled to the UK and the US. (Above) Design guru Rajeev Sethi working with Odisha artists in 1983 for a Smithsonia­n exhibition.

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