Jyoti Bhatt-An educator, innovator and an inspiration : Sunil Darji
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A Face, mixed Intaglio print -1968 |
Jyoti Bhatt was born in Bhavnagar of
Gujarat state in 1934. His love for drawing during his childhood fascinated him
to draw birds’ images as its varied forms and species. During the age of
adolescence Jyoti Bhatt has developed a habit of reading the ‘Kumar’ monthly
published by Kalaguru Ravishankar Raval, which has been the driving force to
develop his interest in creation of art.
In
1950 he was among the first batch student from The M. S. University’s Fine Arts
Faculty to study under the great artist’s teachers as Professor N. S. Bendre, Professor
Shankho Choudhary, and Professor K.G. Subramanian. During the study in The M. S.
University an artist, art critic and Guajarati poet shree Gulam Mohammed sheikh
was one of the colleagues during 1955 to 1961, through him he gets to publish
his illustrations, cover pages in the literary publications published by Gulam
Sheikh’s literary friends.
His experimentations on varied materials
based on a raw surface such as the walls, crusty land and ruptured land sites affected
by the war are the prime source for him to create on the canvas and metal plates
to further take prints from it. Some such successful paintings and prints are
the product on canvas, board, ply board or etching plate, he also used
indigenous materials to create the textures like sand, rubber, jute, linoleum
etc. which many a times left over with a kind of relief quality in
collaboration along with oil colors and the surfaces which we can see from his Pratt
institute period experimental works,
where he was constantly in contact with the artists and methodologists like Antoni Tapies and Alberto Burri’s abstract art
language. Such experimental works are Like ‘Dark landscape’, ‘untitled’, or ‘Ruins of Landscape-Forgotten place’ of
this period.
During Fulbright fellowship at New York
trained him in the various methods of printmaking, where he tried to create the
textural surface on to the plate using deep etched lines, open bite areas, or
many a times embossing on a copper plate as in ‘Shimmering Landscape’ (1964), ‘Remains
of the lost fort’(1964) where one can see his love to use color in an
intaglio print using varied rubber rollers charged with the printing inks. “Glimmering Horizon-New York” of 1964 another
a mixed intaglio print is an image separating with a patch of bright lineage,
also created using the deep textural surface in an abstract language.
His experiments continued along with
playing on “positive and negative “spaces, dense patterns and movement of
shapes and forms. What was perhaps crucial then for him was navigating the
vibrant city and geometries and spaces of the subway during his stay in New
York.
During the late sixties, Jyoti Bhatt began documentation of traditional Indian craft and design, using camera, soon it become one of his passions. For him photography is an art form, by which one can capture images, the moments and the essence of the thought in a picture by clicking a button of the camera. These direct and simply composed photographs of him soon started getting acclaim; also he received a numerous national and international awards for his photographs.
The rooted culture of the Saurashtra heritage tradition has always reflected in Jyotibhai’s art, whether we come across his prints, paintings or photography as a documentation or as a creative expression, and that has lead him to cross the border to the tradition of Indian culture of the varied states of the country, as to preserve and to showcase as a part of his reflections in the creative artistic expressions.
He joined the artistic initiatives; ‘Group 1890’, as one of the founder member. He realized that folk art has
many strands which strengthen one another. "Each work of art provides an opportunity
of creativity, and refines human sensibilities and responses. Living within a
creative network, an individual artist attains a special stature and
refinement. The disappearance of the network, with the breakdown of traditional
cultures, is bound to cause cultural impoverishment," he says.
Whether
you see an art work an intaglio print of him or a serigraph print, the needle
etch the line or dots or the lines and design created with the stenciling
squeezed through the screen creates an array of effects which creates the illusion of the woven textile of the Saurashtra
or the traditional craft and tribal artifact by an artisan, the feel of those
cross stitch embroidery, the Rangoli motifs along with the calligraphic text or
the direct quotes from the local vernacular idiom sometimes he uses as an
artistic elements, which are a kind of his rich visual and artistic motif bank, that reflects and time by time it gets
enriched in term of new motif or element of visual vocabulary added to it. This kind of peculiar exploration of
vernacular art language never ever reflected in the Indian art so extensively
before.
The
challenge of using the motifs and Images in the artistic encounter like ‘Chandamama’, ‘Surajbapa’, ‘Parrot’, ’Peacock’,
‘Nag Devta’, ‘Khodiar Mata’, ‘Sathiya’, ‘Dog’, an ‘Arrow’, local playing games
like Chausar , or the people of Saurashtra, and Kutchh like Rabaries, Bharwad
and the woman with the earthen pots on the head, the bunny houses of the Kutchh
region of Gujarat decorated with the mirror along with the mud on the walls, or
whatever comes in to his visual lingual motif bank, he has adopted all and made
use of it with an aesthetic sense as an ornamentation to make his own language
of art.
For him how you interpret an art work is
an interesting task, one can have their own reading from the image to image. In
his “The Fly” is a free image using
two women figures in central part of the composition, which is broken with a
blue fly in the extreme center. The
figures are depicted with ornamentation on their bodies wandering on one side
as waiting for someone; the upper part has three legs suggesting to fly as
wings and, so a lag in below part of the composition overlapping the oval shape. The composition itself reminds us to
the form of a ‘Mandala’ diagrams. Here the whole structure speaks of as an airplane
and partly as a fly in form.
Another an integral part of his
composition is the words, as that fills the gaps between the visuals. Most
works are having words, lines from a bhajan or numericles in response to the
stories and situations which converse, and create suitable meanings. As in one
of his earliest paintings done at the age of 12 depicts a harijan man on the
road, entitled “chheta r’ejo”. The
story being that while passing on a street , harijan’s were required to say
loudly “chheta r’ejo Mai Baap” to warn the upper caste people of their presence
so as to prevent ‘pollution’ by physical contact or even with their shadow on
the ground.
Text and words such as ‘DOG’, ‘GOD’, ‘SATI’,
‘SITA’, ‘Light the flame Bright the fire, Red is the colour of Fire’, ‘Fly’
these words and sentences and many more fraises and words from the local
language of Gujarati like ‘Chandra’, ‘Surya’, ‘Bhale Padharya’, and ‘Hu’ as
himself the ‘I’, sometime the popular Guajarati proverbs are the all used as to
add meanings along with the images which are sometimes taken from the popular
culture of the society and the traditional culture of states of country which
gives the regional cultural references to collaborate the Indian mythology,
sometime the traditional forms from the folklore and tribal art forms, which
are some way punch and leave remark to the onlooker and also give an
understanding of the deeper philosophy of life, that shows his concern to
reinterpret and to bring the heritage of folk and tribal art form in to the
mainstream contemporary art and re-document the folk and tribal arts.
In 1964-66 he started depicting the
‘Self’ as in the form of a face, during his study in the USA, and produced
artworks like ‘Self Portrait in new York’
(1964), and ’Man under the sky’
(1965). Where the human face is symbolic imaginative ‘self’ in the quest of
individualistic reference to present the society and its extended approach
towards his own cultural representation. The iconic self symbol became his
prime element in these works, where he expresses the humanity that portrays his
hidden messages in terms of the social values and the human condition in
different situation. It is noticed that the various images, some time text and
textures are been juxtaposed along with the face, images like peacock are often
visualized in such prints, or sometimes the repetition of the same image can be
seen using each in opposite direction, which creates diverse significant language
to communicate with the audience by their own interpretation. Elements such as
an ‘arrow’ suggesting a direction or ‘religious gods’ or the symbols of Indian ‘deities’
which also shows much of the Indian-ness, the culture we grown and to brought
up from within which is reflected in these prints and images. The use of
photographic images also been integrated along with many serigraphic images.
For
him "The photo-documentation work is
equally creative. Also, my work has brought into spotlight those many tribal
artists who were underprivileged of any recognition or reward”, he states.
He
tends to interpret things in different ways, in different meanings, in
reference or in situation, which one could read in terms of one’s own
understanding. If we see on a technical point of view Jyoti bhai is versatile
among the Indian printmakers as to see his experiments done in the printmaking
medium, as he make use of the image in various ways, by using the old images in
the new print work, cutting the plates and by arranging it and create meanings out
of it or repeating an image in terms of making meaningful in various situations
by adding own interpretation. His early etched plates are having unique
characteristics, they are most meticulously carved surfaces using line and
aquatint and more of using textures. The compact imageries have
interconnections which speak of his interest in the expressive manner which
have an embellishment and attract the viewer to go in to the image and have dialogue
with it.
Jyoti
Bhatt’s diaries are very important to understand the devotion for his artistic career
as that is the source for today’s onlooker, or the time as it shows, the
curiosity about him to visit various interior places, meeting with people,
observing and understanding their culture ,traditions, festive moments, the
zest for knowing and exploring the cultural boundaries, one could understand
how it could have managed by him, each small details are depicted in this diary
pages since 1969, which has been continued until now, it is really a treasure
for today and times to come, one can see through the past culture of rich heritage
of India and its people. Interesting information regarding the people living in
various states, its villages, tribes and their day today life have been
described in it.
Focus of
the local deities, temples, gods, the local Melas (fairs) falls on specific
days of specific festive seasons, which are very important in today’s time that
one can understand how things have been changed, the shifting of this
traditions and the influence of the new urban trends have affected to these
lives.
In various
of his diaries reflect his visits of Kawant, Chhota Udaipur or Panvad, Jaisalmer
in Rajasthan, Alirajpur and numerous places among the country which is really
amazing that to travel these inferior places, roaming throughout in the nature,
exploring the way of living of these people, their food, their instruments, and
costumes all are depicted habitually in Guajarati and English language.
In a diary
of his visits from 1975 to 1985 to Rajasthan, Jammu and Kashmir, Panchmahals,
the observations are mentioned, where depiction regarding the Rajasthan - the
Mandana - and the paintings on the floors, walls, houses, verandahs, the
kitchen-fire places or places nearby the tree trunks for seating were decorated
with mixture of mud and cow dung and then painted with white and Indian red
(geru) colours are used by the local people.
The diaries
are also have information of linguistic examples, their changes, meanings, differences
due to its geographic atmosphere, i/e quote on the book of Dr. Jyotindra Jain “painted myths of
creation”, or Bhadli sentences by the tribes of Gujarat from Saurashtra, this sentences
are depicting the local culture inculcating the life, nature, local gods and sometime
futuristic assumptions, and folk songs etc.
He has
depicted also on Katchh of Gujarat state, known for its rich culture, tradition,
the life, art and crafts of the people their habitats - bunny (place to stay)
etc. in these diaries. Places like Bharuch, Dediyapada ,Vansada of Gujarat,
states like Madhyapradesh, Odisha, Bengal, Uttranchal, and Uttarpradesh and
south India and its villages, and where ever he found the source of hidden
cultural fragrance he reached and studied, researched and documented through
his creativity, and photographically.
The
creative inner self of Jyoti Bhai at the age of 86, still has that immense,
inherent zest to pursue, and capture the moments adding appropriate meanings
with creative urge, which inspires, influences to his numerous friends, art lovers
and art practitioners, around the world
Assistant Professor, Department of Graphic Arts,
Faculty of Fine Arts,
The M S University of Baroda, Vadodara
Very good
ReplyDeleteExcellent work.
ReplyDeleteDue regards
Good research ....writtings on Joythi..sir...done indepth extensive...Sunil Sir....
ReplyDeleteWow sunil sir ...bht sare new sikhne or jaan ne k liye mila ..
ReplyDeleteWawoo and thanks sunil sir to share.
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