Tribal Women Artists Cooperative
Formation | 31 August 1993 |
---|---|
Founder | Bulu Imam |
Type | Artists cooperative |
Headquarters | Hazaribagh, Jharkhand, India |
The Tribal Women Artists Cooperative (TWAC) was initially founded by Bulu Imam[1] (Convener, INTACH Hazaribagh Chapter) in 1993 out of a Tribal Art Project funded by the Australian High Commission, New Delhi. The cooperative continues to be directed by Bulu Imam, Padma Shri awardee (2019) as a social worker for promoting the ritual Khovar and Sohrai mural painting tradition,[2] benefiting thousands of village women, and has gained international recognition through several exhibitions in major art galleries around the world.[3]
This unique tribal art project was started with about 40 women artists which began to bring the art on walls of the mud houses to paper and paint professionally. Today, the cooperative's initiative empowers over 5,000 women enabling their art to be exhibited in over 60 international venues in Australia, Canada, America, Japan, Italy, Germany, France, Sweden, Switzerland, and England.[4]
The tribal art created by these women artists over the decades has been displayed and preserved in the Sanskriti Museum & Art Gallery, and accessible for research and study to anyone interested in the development of tribal art and culture in Jharkhand. The first collection of tribal paintings made by the cooperative in early 1990s are a part of the Bulu Imam Collection, and which is made available exclusively through the cooperative.[citation needed]
Objectives
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (May 2022) |
The raison d’être for the founding of the cooperative was to highlight the Meso-chalcolithic rock art of the region connected with the tradition of Khovar and Sohrai mural painting done by the tribal communities in Jharkhand as an economic resource. It also aimed to highlight the issues of displacement and indigenous rights threatened by opencast coal mining, and destruction of forests vital to the tribals as well as tigers and elephants using them as corridors. This art project was created to bring to the tribal women of the region a sense of strength in their identity and as a means of economic support.
The profits received through exhibitions and sale of artworks are divided into three accounts:
- Welfare fund for women artists.
- Employment fund through which a third of all earnings goes directly to the artist, and
- Cooperative maintenance fund.
Major collections
[edit]- Australian Museum, Sydney
- Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
- Casula Art Centre, Casula, Sydney
- Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane
- Powerhouse Museum, Sydney
- Flinders Museum Collection, Adelaide
- Dietmar Rothermund Collection, Heidelberg
- Volkerkunde Museum, Heidelberg
- (Late) Soli P.Godrej Collection, Bombay
- Kekoo & Khorshed Gandhy collection, Bombay
- Daniela Bezzi Collection, Milan
- Tarshito Studio, Rome (14 - 8’x8’ feet Cloth Paintings)
- Marcus Leatherdale Collection, New York
- Michel Sabatier Collection, La Rochelle, France
- INTACH Collection, New Delhi
- Museum of Man Collection, Montreal
- South Delhi Polytechnic, New Delhi
- Museum Rietberg, Zurich, Switzerland
- Espace de Congrès, La Rochelle, France
- S.P.Godrej Collection, Bombay
- Diedi Von Schawen Collection, Paris
- Herve Pedriolle Collection, Paris
- British Museum, London
- SADACC Trust Collection, Norwich
- Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge[5]
- National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Creative Crusader". democraticworld.in. Retrieved 2022-03-17.
- ^ ArtsPositive (2018-10-05). "Saving Khovar and Sohrai Tribal Art". Medium. Retrieved 2022-03-17.
- ^ "79-YO Padma Shri Awardee Spent 30 Years Preserving 10000-Year-Old Art". The Better India. 2022-02-23. Retrieved 2022-03-17.
- ^ "The Painted Forest Villages of Hazaribagh". SOAS University of London. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
- ^ Deogharia, Jaideep (12 December 2016). "Art of tribal women from Hazaribag now decorate interiors". Times of India. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
- ^ Nixon, Lindsay (21 November 2019). "Indigenous Art Is So Camp". Canadian Art. Retrieved 4 May 2022.