A short documentary on the tribal art of Kutch, Gujarat
surprisingly boarded on such perilous journeys to remote communities of the
‘Rabaris’ that have created amazing work, now seemingly part of the adrift realm,
to learn what remains of ancient cultural art, the desires that highlight it,
and how it has been affected over time by diplomatic, societal and spiritual invasions
from the West.
To be human is to create and some of the most compelling
art in the world has been made by some of its poorest people, and this
fascinates me. Thus pops up the question, ‘To what extent can traditional art
survive in the modern world and contemporary times?’
Rabaris, full
of pride, with a feeling of independence and deeply attached to their
tradition, travelled across the subcontinent and spread into different regions.
Adjusting to new circumstances, subgroups of Rabaris instantaneously preserved
their identity and conserved their culture. The balance maintained between
tradition and change is tangibly expressed in Rabari adornment through their
style of embroidery. Their style is distinctive and unique.
This
embroidery is like a language with which women express themselves. It is a
medium of conveying their thoughts, emotions and beliefs to the world. All
motifs and their specific composition have a name and meaning. Many of these
symbols represent elements central to Rabari’s everyday life and throw light
upon how the community sees the world and their views about the different parts
of the world. The type of embroidery on the garment clearly classifies and institutes
the person’s identity; the different communities of Rabari women can be
identified from the type and placement of embroidery on their odhanis and
blouses and men’s fate by his turban.
Even
today, in the Rabari community, the social gathering of producing embroidery is
learnt and traded during weddings in form of dowries. Today a Rabari daughter
is likely to bring thirty to fifty cross-stitched blouses to her in-laws. Biological
families disapprove girls for not completing their embroidery in time. Thus,
unmarried girls sense the pressure and dearth of time and are put into
conflicting situations.
At the
same time due to the move in the market economy, families could no longer
survive on one source of income, so women started to work. For them, there is
little differentiation between embroidering for pay and doing plantation work. It’s
basically a means of survival.
On similar grounds, the
silk route was a milestone in the history of textiles and carpets as well.
Carpets are regarded as holy pieces of textiles in several cultures across the
world such as Islam. They are used as prevailing means of narration just as the
Rabaris did through their embroidery.
Carpets acquire their names
from the regions in which they are manufactured as well as their methods
of fabrication, the distinctive arrangements of their adornment, the outline
of the design and the purpose of usage. These carpets had demonstrative bodily
forms portrayed in a very symmetrical way. Portraits were one significant channel
of narrating a story about the carpets as seen in ‘The Somerset House,’ Van
Eyck’s ‘Arnolfini Painting,’ Lorenzo Lotto’s ‘Husband and Wife’ and Domenico di
Bartolo’s ‘The Marriage of the Foundlings.’ The carpets perceived in the
paintings had a lot to communicate differing upon simple essentials like position,
shade and usage. Also what caught my attention was how the purpose of the carpets
from the East differs from the carpets from the West.
http://gaatha.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Rabari-Embroidery.jpg
http://blog.gaatha.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/embroidery-kachh-technique1.jpg
A short documentary on the tribal art of Kutch, Gujarat surprisingly boarded on such perilous journeys to remote communities of the ‘Rabaris’ that have created amazing work, now seemingly part of the adrift realm, to learn what remains of ancient cultural art, the desires that highlight it, and how it has been affected over time by diplomatic, societal and spiritual invasions from the West.
http://gaatha.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Rabari-Embroidery.jpg
http://blog.gaatha.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/embroidery-kachh-technique1.jpg
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