Tribal Folk of India
and their Art
Nature and Culture in Equilibrium
The Tribals of India
India has the largest population of tribal or ‘indigenous people’ [as defined by the UN] in the world. The recent 2011 Census of India put this number at 104 million or 8.6% of the total Indian population of 1.2 billion.1 If they were a stand-alone nation, they would be numerically 30% bigger than Germany today.
There are believed to be upwards of 600 distinct tribal communities and almost 2/3rds of them are concentrated in a swath of seven contiguous States that run across Central India: Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Odisha, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh.1
In 2001, the Bhils and Gonds numbered 12.7 million [15%] and 10.9 million [12%], respectively making them the two dominant tribal groups within the country.
It was Verrier Elwin [1902-1964], born in England and later taking Indian nationality, who produced some of the early anthropological studies of the tribals of India. He was a follower of Mahatma Gandhi and a participant in the national movement for independence from British Rule. He lived among the Gond tribals of Central India, married a Gond and was a fierce defender of their rights. He was later appointed Advisor to the Government of India on tribal affairs in North East India.
Elwin writes in Tribal Art of Middle India: “Tribal India is to be filled with thousands of small schools – there is danger that they will be led to reject the old life and that they will be given in its place little idea of how to have rhythm and vitality, exuberance and delight.”
A long and tragic history of discrimination has pursued the tribals going back to pre and post-colonial times. They were always ‘outsiders’ who, when the local monarch’s rule did not reach their forest domain, were able to govern themselves. Caste-based religious and ‘private property’-based economic sanctions gradually moved them to the lower rungs of the social ladder.
C.R Bijoy, an ardent activist of the interests of the Tribals writes:
“It is a cruel joke that people who can produce some of India’s most exquisite handicrafts, who can distinguish hundreds of species of plants and animals, who can survive off the forests, the lands and the streams sustainably with no need to go to the market to buy food are labeled as ‘unskilled’”
“….the official and popular perception of Adivasis [tribals] is merely that of isolation in forest, tribal dialect, animism, primitive occupation, carnivorous diet, naked or semi-naked, nomadic habits, love, drink and dance. Contrast this with the self-perception of Adivasis as casteless, classless and egalitarian in nature, community-based economic systems, symbiotic with nature, democratic according to the demands of the times, accommodative history and people-oriented art and literature”2
Despite many well-intentioned laws and measures by the Government of India, including protective arrangements, affirmative action and developmental resources/benefits, measures of progress relating to the economic well being, health & education of this vulnerable community remain elusive.
References:
1. http://tribal.nic.in/WriteReadData/CMS/Documents/201306100104316683175RGI10june.pdf
2. http://www.pucl.org/Topics/Dalit-tribal/2003/adivasi.htm
Indian Folk Painting
India’s colorful diversity in ethnicity, language, food, religion and culture comes, in no small measure, from the 29 States and 7 Union Territories that comprise this vast sub-continent.
Art is no exception and especially its indigenous paintings. The following groups are now well established and have a strong following within India and overseas: Gond and Bhil artists of Madhya Pradesh, Warli of Maharashtra, Madhubani of Mithila [now Bihar], Saura, Kondhs and Santals of Odisha and West Bengal to name a few. A few brief descriptions follow below:
Gonds
Gond, thought to be a corrupt form of Kond, means a forest covered mountain in the Telegu language and the area, in antiquity, was known as Gondwana. Although they carry the same name, Gond tribal sub-branches often have very different lifestyles: the Pardhan Gonds were bards and singers to Gond Kings while present day Gond artists mainly come from the Mandla-Dindori area of the State of Madhya Pradesh.
Gond artists have based their paintings on their ancient myths and folklores and of images of daily life- not only from what exists but also much that is drawn from dreams, memory and imagination. The Pardhan Gond style is unmistakable and distinctive, since artists work with inherited conventions.
At the same time, each artist brings something unique and individual to their shared heritage. One of the ways is through the use of decorative patterns and motifs, almost a unique identifying marker, to fill the surface of images. These motifs have mainly come from everyday objects or nature: ears of grain, seeds, rope that binds sheaves of wheat, honeycombs, cut lemons etc.
Imagination also has played an important role for creating their own pattern, dancers with linked hands seen from above is one such example. Numerous gods and goddesses, strange birds, flying snakes, animals and beautiful trees inhabit the songs of the Pardhans. It was these images that were expressed onto canvas in various colors and in a distinctive style.
Jagdish Swaminathan [1928-1994], one of India’s most influential artists, is the one individual to whom we owe much in bringing indigenous art to national and then to international attention. He was a co-founder of Bharat Bhawan in Bhopal, a highly successful, multi-art complex funded by the Government of Madhya Pradesh in which he showcased modern and tribal art at the same level.
In 1981, Swaminanthan, while leading a team to document the indigenous art of Madhya Pradesh in Central India, discovered Jangarh Singh Shyam [1962-2001], a young Gond painter of the Pardhan sub-tribe, and brought him from Patangarh village of Mandla district to Bharat Bhawan. It was here that Jangarh started off on a journey that was to transform him from an unknown painter of village-hut wall murals to working on paper and canvas using water colors and acrylic paint.
His extraordinary artistic talent soon brought Jangarh international acclaim. He went on to become a towering figure within the Indian indigenous art world until his untimely death in Japan at age 39. He remains to this day a huge source of inspiration to successive generation of tribal artists.
In a review of a 2009 exhibition of works by the Pundole Art Gallery, Mumbai of tribal artists Bhuri Bai, Ladoo Bai, Ram Singh Urveti and Narmada Prasad Tekam, the respected Indian art critic Ranjit Hoskote describes their work thus:
“These artists share a gift for conveying an aesthetic experience that is perhaps best glossed with the sanskrit word laya: a subliminal rhythm, a cosmic flow, the rippling-in and rippling-out of the universal breath. Sinuous animals and fabular birds inhabit these frames; real and imagined aquatic and arboreal creatures address us, speaking not only from an ecosystem but also from an ecology of the mind”
“ They are adept at calibrating the gradations of strangeness: in their epiphanies, trees sing in many voices, their trunks morphing into rivers in flood, swollen with uncontainable memories; snails fly, boars fight tigers over territory; ancestral figures cross vast distances on tireless horses, and turtles carry the legends of dead islands across the oceans”.
“In the paintings of all four artists, we also find traces of the spatial dispositions of Mithila painting from northern Bihar, auspicious motifs from the Pithora stories of the Madhya Pradesh-Gujarat border, the geometricised figuration of Warli ritual painting. and occasionally, we also find references to the work of contemporary paintings by Australian artists of aboriginal heritage”.1
The French art critic and collector Hervé Perdriolle examines the close resemblance of Gond art with the aboriginals of Australia with their common use of dots that permeate their painting.
“For the aboriginals the dots refer to dreaming and territory; with regard to the Gonds, Jangarh explained to me that when the shamans of his tribe go into a trance, they have the feeling that the particles of their bodies disperse into space to join with those of the spirits and form other bodies. This is an ancestral, poetic vision of the atom, of the infinitely small joining the infinitely large”.2
Bhils
The Bhils are the 3rd largest tribe of India and are spread across several States in Central India. The Dravidian word for bow is ‘Bil’ and the Bhil are well known marksmen with the bow and arrow. Bhuri Bai, the well known Bhil tribal painter from Pitol-Motabawri village in Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh, started painting at age ten. She was a contemporary of Jangarh and also discovered by Swaminathan.
Her brightly colored paintings focus on the relationship with nature and the creatures of the forest and are also distinguished by the use of dots which are scattered in the artwork. She is the recipient of the highest award 'Shikhar Samman (1986-1987) from the Government of Madhya Pradesh.
Warli
The Warli tribe is to be found in the Thane district of Maharashtra State and despite being located not far from the teeming financial capital of the country, the mega-city of Mumbai, they remain remarkably untouched and unaffected by urban influence.
On one hand their simple, matchstick-like figures most closely resemble pre-historic cave paintings and yet the scenes depicting their everyday village life and social customs convey a complex sense of motion and rhythm.
Their paintings are also distinctive in the use of white rice-paste paint on a cow-dung and earth color base. These paintings by the Warli, subdued in color but highly elaborate in content, are in marked contrast to the vibrant colors used by the other Tribals of India.
In the 1970s a Warli artist Jivya Soma Mashe became known and his exceptional talent was quickly recognized in India and overseas. In 2009 he received the Prince Claus Fund Award of the Netherlands and the citation aptly describes Mashe’s contribution:
“Jivya Soma Mashe is honoured for his creative reinvention of an art vocabulary that was disappearing, for his vivid representation of the Warli vision of nature and culture in equilibrium, for highlighting the contemporary relevance of local forms of knowledge, and for his significant contribution to the culture and development of the tribal peoples”3
In 2011 Mashe was awarded the Padma Shri by the President of India.
Saura
The Saura of Odisha are also well known for their tradition of painting on the walls of their dwellings using religious and ceremonial themes.
Like the Warli, primitive stick figures are used in the paintings of everyday village life but a deeper spiritual meaning exists in the worship of their deity Edital during seasonal rituals related to the harvest and family celebrations such as marriage and the child birth.
References
1. http://www.pundoleartgallery.in/uploads/exhibition/pdf/45_pdf.pdf
2. Perdriolle, Hervé: Indian Contemporary Art, 5 Continents, 2012, p63
3. http://www.princeclausfund.org/en/network/jivya.html
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To view additional Gond and Bhil artwork , visit the website of FolkPaintingsIndia:
http://folkpaintingsindia.com/index.php/