{"id":8273,"date":"2011-11-03T09:00:38","date_gmt":"2011-11-03T09:00:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=8273"},"modified":"2011-11-03T09:00:38","modified_gmt":"2011-11-03T09:00:38","slug":"parcel-from-india","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/11\/03\/parcel-from-india\/","title":{"rendered":"Parcel from India"},"content":{"rendered":"
Readers of this blog might already know that we discovered Indian publishing
house Tara Books on Twitter a week or two after we first launched. Since then,
we’ve followed them with interest, and recently we got a lovely parcel
in the mail with a review copy of
Following My Paint Brush<\/strong> by Dulari Devi, which I’d like to
show you.<\/p>\n
<\/a>Backing up a bit, though, first, who are Tara? Based in Chennai,
South India, they’re a “fiercely independent” publishing
house showcasing illustration and writing from various regions and
communities. They value “adventurous people around the world”.
The feminist principles of dialogue and creating opportunities at the
heart of their work are outlined pretty well in this piece
over on For Books’ Sake<\/a>. They want to open your heart and your
mind, balancing “the pleasures of a beautiful book with wit and
political rigour. Our titles are often unclassifiable, straddling accepted
genres. We have pioneered the art of the book made entirely by hand,
making artists\u2019 books affordable for the average book
lover.”<\/p>\n
From the point of view of my illustrating I get particular enjoyment from
their picture books, which always teach me new things – when we
spoke to Gita Wolf and Sirish Rao about their work with artist Bhajju
Shyam on The Flight of the Mermaid<\/strong><\/a> a few months ago, I found I
was learning about Gond
tribal art<\/a> in the process.<\/p>\n
Moving on now to the book in question, which is artist
Dulari Devi<\/strong>‘s first book. She paints in the
Mahdhubani style popular in the Mithila region of Bihar, eastern
India, which you can read more about for starters on Wikipedia
here<\/a>.<\/p>\n
I am an artist, but I wasn’t always one. This is the story
of how it happened.<\/p>\n
– Dulari Devi<\/p><\/blockquote>\n <\/a>This is a gentle, inspiring, true
story about the urge to create – and running mildly but
persistently through it, Dulari’s struggle to work that
process out in a context where art isn’t a career she can
economically support, and where education in artistic technique
is not easily come by. She learns, in her own words, by doing,
and keeping doing. One day after a long day working as a
domestic help, she finds herself fashioning a bird from clay,
and a journey begins. And for her, the discovery of her own
creative power, and through it a new sense of self, is a
momentous change. It would be really facile and silly to compare
my own life to hers, so I won’t, except to say that I
struggle with neurotic “creative block” a lot in my
own way – and this reminded me to pull my finger out and
get down with the muse again. There’s something very
essential and beautiful about the way she describes having the
‘get excited and make things’-epiphany, and I love
the cyclical way the text, which is all transcribed from
Dulari’s oral account of her life, begins and ends with
the affirmation “I am an artist”.<\/p>\n The art is serenely beautiful, full
of detail that jumps out at you on a second look. Art Nerd
moment: Mithila folk art really appeals to my love of strong
line-work. Dulari’s work is high on decorative geometric
borders and patterns, and double-lined and crosshatched outlines
lifting the figures off the page. If I had kids, I’d read
them this. As it is, I was super happy reading it to myself,
with lots of pauses to notice all the birds hiding in the trees
(I made a mental note to make Markgraf, our resident bird-art
enthusiast, look at the birds).<\/p>\n
So there’s a pile of reasons why you should keep an eye on
Tara (plus the fact their latest graphic novel, Sita’s Ramayana<\/strong><\/a>, hits these shores in
2012, but it’s already made
the NYT bestsellers<\/a>). Christmas is coming, after all! Buy
your family some beautiful readables.<\/p>\n