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PATS: BENGALI SCROLL PAINTINGS
[See example of a Pat with commentary]
The presence of
patuas or itinerant artist-minstrels is attested to from antiquity,
since the seventh century literary text, Bana's drama Harshacharita,
mentions artists who exhibited scrolls that narrated the rewards and punishments
conferred upon a person by Yama, the Lord of Death. Though the tradition
of pats or scroll paintings is today associated with Bengal, it
is possible that it was more widespread in pre-modern India. The artist
would carry a number of such scroll paintings from place to place, and
when he arrived at a village and had an audience gathered around him,
he would undo the scroll painting panel by panel, narrating or singing
the story as he went along, taking perhaps as much as ten or fifteen minutes
to finish his narration. More often than not the stories were well-known
to the listeners, but each patua or chitrakar, picture-maker,
furnished a slightly different inflection to the tale, attaching rather
more importance to some parts of the narrative. Not every scroll painting
carried by an artist had been executed by him; some doubtless belonged
to the family.
The
pats were at one time painted on cloth but are now largely executed
on cheap hand-made paper that is stitched together with a cotton thread.
The scrolls are almost always unmounted. Though synthetic dyes have been
in use for some years, at one time only vegetable dyes and natural pigments
were used, and a starch derived from the bel fruit was used as
binding material. Scroll paintings can be as short as four feet, and as
long as fifty feet, but the average length of a scroll is closer to fifteen
feet. The scroll is divided into vertical panels, again not always of
equal length, and each panel narrates an episode of the story, for instance:
the exile of Rama, Lakshmana, and Sita into the forest; the abduction
of Sita; the burning of Lanka by Hanuman; and the death of Ravana.
Bright colors, such as red, yellow, green, and blue predominate, and the
background color is most often red. The chitrakars come from both Hindu
and Muslim castes, and some persons have syncretic names; and as is not
uncommon in artisan groups, Hindu and Muslim customs are often commingled,
and Muslim chitrakars are just as adept at the representation of Hindu
myths.
There is a specific
class of Yama or Jadu (Magic) pats, designed largely for the Santal
tribespeople, in which the dead are endowed with sight by means of magic.
But the stories generally told in scroll paintings are derived from the
Ramayana, the Mahabharata, the puranas, or other mythological
lore and folk tales which are sometimes specific to Bengal, such as tales
about the snake-goddess, Manasa. The Krishna-Radha legends are a favorite
subject matter for the pats, as are tales about Shiva and his consort
Parvati; but by no means are all the stories derived from religious or
mythological literature. Sometimes the subjects are derived from social
and political issues of the day, or are intended to satirize prevalent
social mores. As the accompanying slide show of one pat suggests, even
topics like AIDS have reached the attention of patuas. Some observers
have suggested that the art of the patua is rapidly disappearing, and
certain the advent of cinema and cable television has jeopardized a great
many traditional art forms. However, like many other predictions made
of Indian conditions, this one is far from being fulfilled at the present
moment, and it is possible that amidst the technological innovations and
splendors of our times, some people may yet discover the simpler pleasures
of life.
Further Reading:
Subramanyan, K. G. "The comic-strip of the Bengal
Village." In India, Volume "Specially Published for the Festival
of India in the U.S.A." Bangkok: Media Transasia Limited under sponsorship
of Festival of India, 1985, pp. 49-53.
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