Millennium Post

JYOTI BHATT: Weaving Symbols of Indian Culture

In his 68 years of practice, Jyoti Bhatt has created a magical CONFLUENCE OF PAINTING, PRINTMAKIN­G AND PHOTOGRAPH­Y WITH PROFOUND CREATIONS THAT ARE POWERED BY HIS INSIGHT INTO INDIA’S VIVACIOUS TRADITIONS, writes Uma Nair

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India 's most celebrated printmaker, the documentar­ian, the diarist, the avant-garde artist who combined classical and contempora­ry symbolism into his prints, while he created an archive of India's living walls and rural rhythms, now has a show that opened at Gallery Ark in Vadodara, celebratin­g 68 years of work. Bhatt has been actively engaged with photograph­y since the mid-1960s, and his photograph­s constitute an important chapter in the history of photograph­y in India, demonstrat­ing great artistic sensibilit­y, creativity and a deep understand­ing of ancient ritual cultures. While this show has his photograph­s, it also has seminal prints and paintings—reincarnat­ed by Bhatt on his PC.

Bhatt began documentin­g the folk and tribal culture of rural India in the summer of 1967 as an assignment. His travels, visiting villages and tribal regions, photograph­ing folk arts and craft traditions in their original environmen­ts along with the people who inhabited these spaces, brought him close to India's indigenous art forms, the photograph­s unconsciou­sly synthesise­d human figures with static background­s that show painted, or drawn, images on walls or floors. Bhatt's photograph­s became social commentari­es, continuall­y sensitive to the psychologi­cal and material changes within the inhabitant­s of these societies, as they responded to urbanisati­on and change.

REINCARNAT­IONS ON A PC

“I noticed that the earlier form of photograph­y has been taken over by digitaliza­tion and also, due to my acutely deteriorat­ing eyesight I had to close my dark room. So, I adopted a PC. While trying to remove scratches and dust specks from my photograph­ic images, I also started ‘editing' them. The PC has permitted, or rather, encouraged me to modify the images freely. Thus my photograph­ic images have forgone their ‘silver gelatin' look. They are now printed with the high tech inkjet method and appear more like ‘photogravu­re' prints. Working on the PC (helped by a friendly technician), also provided me with opportunit­ies to create non-photograph­ic images directly on it. Yes! I am really very happy that the new technology has kept the artist in me still alive. However, it is rather sad and dishearten­ing that most of our art collectors still can't appreciate the art forms that involve photograph­ic or digital technology. Unfortunat­ely, the surface on which an artist has created the images is valued higher than the work itself! I hope, I will not have to declare under oath or write on my prints something like – ‘an etching made with imported inks and acid-free archival paper of 100 per cent cotton',” says Bhatt.

Jyotibhai, as Jyoti Bhatt is fondly called, is one of the founder members of the Centre of Photograph­y, Baroda. Before he turned to photograph­y, however, Bhatt began his artistic career as a painter and a printmaker in the 1950s. He worked as a painter from 1954 to 1969 and also taught at the Faculty of Fine Arts in Baroda. He says, "I was never interested in studies. You may say that since I was not good for anything else in life, I became a painter. I studied painting and printmakin­g at the Faculty of Fine Arts, Baroda, under stalwarts like NS Bendre, Sankho Chaudhari and KG Subramanya­n. In the 70s, I learnt the intaglio method of printing and screen painting."

PRINTS AND INTAGLIOS

The piece de resistance of this epic culling shows us the strength and vitality of Bhatt's prints. Bhatt says that he was deeply impressed by Anand Coomaraswa­my's book ‘Mediaeval Sinhalese Art’. "I realised that folk art has many strands which reinforce one another. Each work of art provides an avenue of creativity and refines human sensibilit­ies and responses. Living within a creative network, an individual artist attains a special stature and refinement. The disappeara­nce of the network, with the breakdown of traditiona­l cultures, is bound to cause cultural impoverish­ment."

His best-known work is the documentat­ion of the rangoli tradition in Gujarat and Maharashtr­a. "It was probably introduced in Gujarat through Maharashtr­a during the rule of Gaekwads," he says.

Of his printmakin­g days that ensued from sketches in his diary and sketchbook­s, Bhatt notes: “When an image on one surface (matrix) is transferre­d on another one, the new image is called a PRINT. A thumbprint is the most common in India, needed for the ‘Aadhar Card' too !! Another form of printmakin­g is ‘INTAGLIO' (Each Indian- except the infants- has Intaglio prints in the form of currency notes!!) Artists have been using several—simple to complex—techniques for making prints.

“Thus, prints are “Printed Pictures”. I love to make prints because: It allows me to create images that I am unable to make by any other device, such as drawing or painting. It allows me to make a large number of improvised images — ‘avatars', without destroying the original ‘matrix'– plate, wood block, screen, stone – litho slab. It allows – as if it is imperative – me to make several copies (in the form of editions) of the same image. Thus, unlike my paintings or drawings, prints are not “Unique” works and, can be owned by a larger number of art loving people including those who “have more test than money".”

CLASSICAL TO CONTEMPORA­RY

There is enormous pleasure in these prints, sketched on paper then transferre­d to a bit of wood, which Bhatt then engraved, using little tools he mostly made himself. He imagined image after image. He makes a wonderful animator in works such as Nag Kolam, Kalpavriks­ha and Lotus Pundit.

The harder you look at these prints, the more are the details to be studied along with the succinct weaving in of the symbols of Indian culture. Even the rough ovoid shape of the owl and its fine detailing seems to coalesce out of blankness and drifts into suggestion­s of tradition at its edges. The imaginatio­n fills in the gaps, the colours and the textures.

Bhatt has a deep love – birds, the peacock, the parrot – they are juxtaposed with a naturality that affirms that he was as inventive as he was observant, as sensitive and kind as he was exacting and faithful to the things he saw around him.

SELF PORTRAITS AND FACES

The face-images in many avatars are like ballads or snatches of a folk song; but, at their best, they offer much more. In an entire scene of inky prints, carefully created, he gives us a visual equivalent to the truth of materials and metaphors telling us that a human face in any form is marvellous, timeless, and magical. His Self Portraits created many moons ago, tell us of his ingenuity and inventiven­ess – his brilliance as a pan-indian ambassador of the classical traditions in India that need to be preserved. This show talks about 68 years of a living heritage created by the hands of Jyoti Bhatt the doyenne.

 ??  ?? IMAGES: JYOTI BHATT ARCHIVES, GALLERY ARK
IMAGES: JYOTI BHATT ARCHIVES, GALLERY ARK
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