The Art of the Gonds

Namit Arora Avatar

Gond-paintings1I had a pleasant exchange recently with Dr. Michael Yorke, British anthropologist, filmmaker, and Senior Tutor of Ethnographic Film, University College London. In the course of a discussion that began with my Kumbh Mela film, Michael pointed me to the Adivasi Arts Trust, “an organisation that promotes awareness of Indian tribal culture, and
works with the tribes involving them in digital media projects to make
their arts more widely accessible.” AAT works with some of the nearly 400 Adivasi communities that survive in various parts of India.

Googling then led me to Michael’s short film on the art of the Gond people of Central India and a workshop in Bhopal where “a group of Pardhan Gond artists worked with Leslie MacKenzie and Tara Douglas to create an animated cartoon of their own folkstory” (parts one, two). Read more about the remarkable Gond Animation Workshop, participating Gond artists, some Gond folktales, and samples of their music and dance. Other folk stories covered include those of the indigenous people of Nagaland and neighboring states.


Reader Comments


One response to “The Art of the Gonds”

  1. It’s not clear if the animated film based on the drawings has been finished, but I found on YouTube the story of how the elephant lost his wings, produced by Tara Douglas and Leslie MacKenzie. The art here appears to be inspired by the brass sculptures of the Gond, which they go in search of at the end of part 2 of this mini-documentary.

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