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| Nine Forms of Durga
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An
Introduction to Madhubani Paintings
Hindu women who live in villages near the market town of Madhubani
in northern India maintain old traditions and teach them to their
daughters. Painting is one of the traditional skills that is passed
down from generation to generation in the families of some of the
women. They paint figures from nature and myth on household and
village walls to mark the seasonal festivals of the religious year,
for special events of the life-cycle, and when marriages are being
arranged they prepare intricately designed wedding proposals.
But even though women in the villages around Madhubani have
been practicing their folk art, for centuries, the world at large
has come to know about these women and to consider them to be "artists"
only in the last thirty years. Even now, most of their work remains
anonymous. The women, some of them illiterate, are in any case reluctant
to consider themselves individual producers of "works of art" and
only a few of them mark the paintings with their own name.
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| Kamya Proyogya Yantra |
Among the first modern outsiders to document the tradition of
Madhubani painting were William and Mildred Archer. He was a British
civil servant assigned to the district during the colonial era.
The Archers obtained some drawings on paper that the women painters
were using as aids to memory.
Works that the Archers collected went to the India Records Office
in London (now part of the British Library) where a small number
of specialists could study them as creative instances of India's
folk art.
What led the women painters to share their work with the larger
world was a major ecological and economic crisis that resulted from
a prolonged drought in 1966-68 that struck Madhubani and the surrounding
region of Mithila. In order to create a new source of non-agricultural
income, the All-India Handicrafts Board encouraged the women artists
to produce their traditional paintings on handmade paper for commercial
sale. Since then, painting has become a primary source of income
for scores of families.
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