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Since
the 70s, I have concentrated on documenting living art in rural homes that
have been rapidly disappearing because of modern, consumerist lifestyles.
Not that this is the kind of photography I like doing or I am passionate
about, but somebody has to document these lifestyles before they get lost
forever."
Jyotibhai, as Jyoti Bhatt is fondly called, is a founder member of the
Center of Photography, Baroda.
Bhatt actually began as a painter and a printmaker 25 years ago. He worked
as a painter from 1954 to 1969 and taught at the Faculty of Fine Arts in
Baroda. He says, "I was never interested in studies. You may say that since
I was not good for anything else in life, I became a painter. I studied
painting and printmaking at the Faculty of Fine Arts, Baroda, under
stalwarts like N. S. Bendre, Sankho Chaudhari and K. G. Subramanayan. In the
70s, I learnt the intaglio method of printing and screen painting."
But by then, the desire to photograph and document India’s vanishing culture
had already lured him. "I have photographed everything, from intricately
carved doors to floors, pots, pans, walls, houses that is part of our folk
art in rural India. My camera replaced my sketchbook."
Bhatt’s journey as a photographer began way back in 1967, when the Bharatiya
Vidya Bhavan in Mumbai asked him to photograph Gujarat’s folk art. On his
travel through rural Gujarat he photographed wide range of things ---
bandhani and Kutch craftspersons, tattooed bodies, havelis, painted temples,
embroideries."
Deeply impressed by Anand Coomaraswamy's book ‘Mediaeval Sinhalese Art’,
Bhatt realised that folk art has many strands which reinforce one another.
"Each work of art provides an avenue 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.
His best know work is the documentation of the rangoli tradition in Gujarat
and Maharashtra. "It was probably introduced in Gujarat through Maharashtra
during the rule of Gaekwads," he says. Unlike, several other photographers
Bhatt doesn’t indulge in technical gimmicks. His photographs are simple,
just aim-and-shoot kinds. "I have always believed in content over form."
At times, Bhatt works in tandem with sculptor Raghu Kaneria. Their famous
works together have been on women artists in tribal hamlets. "During
festivals, women decorate the cattle. In every tribal hamlet, there are
women artists. Though they are paid for the job, the remuneration is not so
high to become a source of livelihood. They use a lot of bright colours and
narrative format. Artists draw inspiration from mythological tales and the
paintings are believed to protect tribal families from evil forces," says
Bhatt.
Bhatt claims that he has never regretted stopping painting and taking to
photography as an art form. "The photo-documentation work is equally
creative. Also, my work has brought into spotlight those umpteen tribal
artists who were deprived of any recognition or reward, he states. Jyoti
Bhatt lives and works out of Baroda.
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