Excavating Odisha, an investigative Arts Residency, will bring together leading urban artists and local practitioners of many disparate tribal art forms in Orissa to create mesmerising masterpieces.
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Having seen may artisans lose faith in their ancestral art and relocate to cities in search of work and many urban contemporary artists lose touch with their roots, Puneet intends to bridge this gap through his initiative.
“The idea is to bring contemporary, folk, and tribal art together, to make it more usable in today’s context. It is required for both: the folk artist needs to redefine, revive his art and the contemporary urban artist needs to look into his own tradition for inspiration. This is needed to sustain folk art in India,” says Puneet.Today, many folk arts of the region like patachitra, palm leaf painting, terracotta, stone sculpture, coir work, papier-mâché, pipli craft, ikat weaving, and umbrella-making are in danger of either being replaced by industrialization or becoming fossilized. The residency aims to start a new communication between living traditional rural crafts, and urban drive and know-how.
“Sometimes the traditional art becomes repetitive and imitational. The artisans keep drawing the same patterns that were being drawn for centuries. Art is a way of living, and it only comes alive when our lives are reflected in it. Now our daily lives have changed, the motifs around us are entirely different. That change needs to reflect in the art. That is the reason I thought of bringing the urban artists and rural artisans together. The aim is to create a space where each gains something,” says Puneet.
Excavating Odisha will focus on people and their stories, skills, knowledge and wisdom, aesthetics, songs, fashion, indigenous design, vocabulary, and agricultural knowledge.
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“The programme will also serve as an effort to document the histories and narratives of the craftspeople. It will explore the challenges facing themand help connect them with modern technology. It will stress the importance of financial and commercial dimensions of the ‘crafts world.’It willexplore different ways to make mythological or spiritual contexts of the art newly comfortable in our present day, global world,” says Puneet.The residency will see renowned names like British-Indian multimedia artist Ketna Patel, miniature painter Gopa Trivedi, textile designer Rema Kumar, musicians Vaishali Chakkravarty and Shashwat Srivastava and filmmaker Jyoti working with rural artisans on different projects.
Also read: Leaving a Mark: This 82 -Year-Old Woman Has Been Using Stamps to Create Art for 4 Decades
To know more about the residency, visit the official Facebook page here. To know more about MATI Trust, visit their official website here.