Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
India

Mela Phulkari: Reviving The Threads Of Punjab

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Apr, 2016 12:44 PM
    An integral part of the rich and vibrant culture of Punjab, Phulkari and its ancient form seems to be losing its essence. To reverse this, Concept 1469 and art historian Alka Pande have come together to celebrate the spirit of Phulkari or "flower embroidery" in the third edition of "Mela Phulkari: Threads of Panjab".
     
    The exhibition put together by Kirandeep Kaur and Harinder Singh of Concept 1469 (a Phulkari store) and Alka Pande is on at the Open Palm Court, India Habitat Centre, till April 17. 
     
    Talented artists, designers, photographers and craftsmen have brought in their own reading and understanding of Punjab at the exhibition. 
     
    "Even though the textile industry today is imitating this art (of Phulkari) with the help of machines, the rural tradition that was perpetuated by women has almost disappeared in its original form," Kirandeep Kaur told IANS.
     
    "For women, Phulkari was a medium to express. But, over the years, it has been commercialised. The contemporary pattern of Phulkari is very different from the original one," she added.
     
    "People are not very well aware of what Phulkari is. Through our installations, we are trying to define it for the people of Punjab and others," she added.
     
    The cultural extravaganza is hosting a series of book releases, talks, performances and demonstrations throughout the week.
     
    "It has been called a mela to give it the essence of the celebration of different facets of Punjab," said Kirandeep.
     
     
    The Mela Phulkari festival seeks to showcase the fun-filled lifestyle of this rurally glamorous state through three dimensional art works.
     
    "Mela Phulkari is not just an exhibition but a concept, which I have been exploring with workshop 1469 by collaborating with Harinder Singh and Kirandeep Kaur," said Alka Pande.
     
    "Mela Phulkari has a particular focus on the craft traditions which reveal the identity and politics of the women of Punjab," she said.
     
    "The socio-cultural fabric of the state, the vibrancy, the myths and legends, the stories of women, and the complexity of a woman's dreams of rural Punjab which are being transformed with the rapid economics of development," she added. 
     
    The main installation, "Trinjan Tambu" by artists Harinder Singh, Amrita Mahindra and Simran Kharbanda uses the patchwork of the Phulkari tent structure to describe Punjab's daily nuances of life.
     
    Celebrated photographer Bandeep Singh has showcased his representations, which were shot in Sangrur, a town that was once one of India'sprincely states of India. 
     
    A garment installation “Chanan” by designer Anjali Kalia, inspired from the essence of Punjab through the various eras ranging from the emergence of Sikhism to contemporary interpretations of the same. 
     
    "Music is inseparable from Punjab. So, we are giving a tribute entitled "Gadh jorh" to the old musicians of Punjab who are no more", said Kirandeep.
     
     
    "The exhibition weaves various myriads of Panjab resulting it to an experience which identifies, accepts and critiques Panjab's past and current socio-cutural stories,” said Harinder Singh, creative director of 1469. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For
    India's Minister of State for External Affairs V.K. Singh has stirred a new controversy by suggesting that the ongoing debate on tolerance in India was a creation of "imaginative" minds of those "who are paid".

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand
    The heightened prospects of economic cooperation with Britain are also likely to dispel some of the doom and gloom enveloping the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) after the Bihar debacle.

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal 'Very Critical', Say Doctors

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal 'Very Critical', Say Doctors
    Senior VHP leader Ashok Singhal has been admitted to a private hospital in Gurgaon and his condition is "very much critical", a doctor said on Saturday.

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal 'Very Critical', Say Doctors

    Punjab's Ruling Shiromani Akali Dal Rejects Resolutions Passed By Radicals' 'Sarbat Khalsa'

    Punjab's Ruling Shiromani Akali Dal Rejects Resolutions Passed By Radicals' 'Sarbat Khalsa'
    The gathering was the direct outcome of the conspiracy and complicity of the anti-Panthic Congress party whose leaders gleefully clapped their hands. 

    Punjab's Ruling Shiromani Akali Dal Rejects Resolutions Passed By Radicals' 'Sarbat Khalsa'

    Rajnath Says BJP 'Most Secular Party'

    The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is the country's "most secular party", Home Minister Rajnath Singh said on Tuesday.

    Rajnath Says BJP 'Most Secular Party'

    After Bihar Rout, Advani-Joshi Take On Modi; BJP Welcomes 'guidance'

    After Bihar Rout, Advani-Joshi Take On Modi; BJP Welcomes 'guidance'
    The BJP, in a statement, later said it was "fortunate" to have been led by leaders like Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Advani for decades, and welcomed any guidance and suggestion from the party's "seniors" on victories and defeats.

    After Bihar Rout, Advani-Joshi Take On Modi; BJP Welcomes 'guidance'