According to the artist

ساخت وبلاگ

  .According to the artist, following Mahatma Gandhi’s proposition of buying ‘five yards of khadi’ each, India’s urban population can transform the lives of rural artisans and enrich their livelihoods. So, I wanted to explore the 300 million urban population for whom buying just 5 meters of khadi is not a big thing but their efforts can change the life of millions in the rural areas,” she says.Titled ‘The Khadi March: Just Five Meters’, the solo show by Shelly Jyoti at India Habitat Centre here underlines the importance of ‘khadi’ portraying the fabric as a mark of self-purification, self-reliance and independence.One of the Wholesale Recycled Fabrics installations, titled ‘The Ya Wheel’, has been made up of 1,000 hand-spun cotton yas to capture the meditative process of spinning the wheel in stark contrast to machine-made thread.

Jyoti has worked extensively with Ajrakh artisans from Kutch and with kantha embroiderers from West Bengal for the show that features several khadi installations, 20 Ajrakh textile artworks, a multi-media spoken poetry art and a documentary on Ajrakh textile process.To help promote local artisans and weavers across the country, an exhibition here seeks to encourage larger use of khadi — a fabric that has transformed from being a symbol of India’s freedom struggle To help promote local artisans and weavers across the country, an exhibition here seeks to encourage larger use of khadi — a fabric that has transformed from being a symbol of India’s freedom struggle to become a style statement.Utilising printing blocks that are 200 to 300 years old, Jyoti says her individual pieces draw attention to a shared history whose preservation is currently threatened by the forces of globalisation.Titled ‘Poetics of Khadi: Cutting across Time and space’, the discussion focused on the “idea of khadi as a visual expression of national identity.“Khadi is such an eco-friendly, comfortable and vibrant fabric.

She explores the creative space of women in Bengal who have migrated to northe India in the past decade.Using khadi as the ground for processes of traditional dyeing and embroidery, Jyoti’s images employ symbolic forms with decorated surfaces to highlight aspects of India’s long and complex history.“The show is a call to action that challenges people who live in urban cities to grant dignity to the rural brethren and to rethink our engagement with the spinners, weavers and people who work with handicrafts in the villages.“I engage these women to give them small jobs and explore their inherent talent. Running stitches also have a decorative and aesthetic appeal,” she says.“While working with those who have inherited these textile traditions and are passing them on to the next generations, I have been able to see through the critical relationship between an artisan as a creator and an artist as a visualiser,” she says.”“I am trying to explore the role of clothing in a movement of social change, while exploring khadi as a commodity in 21st century to give spinners and weavers a more organised source of livelihood,” she says.The traditional Bengali art form of Kantha Stitch also finds place in some of her creations.“Five meters of cloth is an individual’s necessity to cover themselves.

The artist was also part of a recent event organised by Yes Institute at Bikaner House in New Delhi. “It is designed to be a study for those who want to understand what the khadi movement stands for, and what it has been able to do,” says Jyoti. It can become a fabric from our freedom struggle to a fashion statement in the present world,” she says.

spandexsuppliers...
ما را در سایت spandexsuppliers دنبال می کنید

برچسب : نویسنده : spandexsuppliers spandexsuppliers بازدید : 325 تاريخ : پنجشنبه 8 خرداد 1399 ساعت: 8:20