Bhil painting

History of Gond Art

The word ‘Gond’ comes from the Dravidian expression ‘Kond’ which means ‘green mountain’. Gond

painting is a famous folk art of the Gond tribal community of central India. It is a form of painting

from folk and tribal art that is practiced by one of the largest tribes in India – the Gond – who are

predominantly from Madhya Pradesh, but can also be found in pockets of Andhra Pradesh,

Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, and Odisha. The history of the Gond people dates nearly 1400 years.

Blended with mystery, pattern, blend of colours and humour, these art pieces depict a modern

psyche.

Elements of Gond Art

The paintings use vibrant colors like orange, yellow, blue and red, and are created with articulately

drawn lines and dots as the method to bring it to life. With natural colors obtained from various

sources like flowers, stones, etc. are used for the creation of these beautiful paintings. Over the

years, the Gond artists have developed their own devices to work with various contemporary

mediums and materials. They would first make dots and calculate the volume of the images. These

dots would be connected to bring about an outer shape, which would then be filled with colours. As

they respond to the immediate social situation Bhil painting and environment, each object they come across in life is aesthetically transformed. The images are tattoos or minimalist human and animal forms.

Although Gond paintings have been centuries-old, with the passage of time, this art form has

gradually shifted from the mud walls of the houses to canvas and papers. Apart from deriving

inspirations from legends and myths, these paintings majorly feature nature as their main subject.

Badadev in Gond Art

(Gond painting by Venkat Shyam)

Stories and Symbolism in Gond Art

“Trees are very important in Gond art. For humans and animals alike – for animals and for birds too,

trees are the most important – in summer, to protect them from the sun and during the monsoon

season to protect from the rain. Trees provide nourishment and food too” says artist Venkat Raman

Singh Shyam.

Ganja Mahua Tree: It tells the story of a Brahman (upper caste) girl and Chamar (lower caste) boy –

when they fell in love, society did not accept them. So they renounced everything and went into the

forest and later were reborn as Ganja and Mahua trees. Hence, it is said that Ganja and Mahua

should not be drunk together as they can never be together.

Saja Tree: The Saja Tree is worshipped by the Bada Dev (Big God) and by the Gond community.

Pakri Tree: When new leaves bloom from this tree, the Gond community eats a dish (saag) made out

of these leaves and this protects them from many diseases and illnesses.

Peepal Tree: The Peepal tree is where the Gods (Devtas) reside and thus the Peepal tree is

considered the most important.

Tamarind Tree: The Tamarind tree also plays an important role for tribal people because they use

tamarind fruit for chutney and sell the fruit for their livelihoods. Many people in the Gond

community place a platform for gods or goddess under the trees.

Trees in Gond Art

(Gond painting by Venkat Shyam)

Music in Gond Communities

In the past, Gond Artists were responsible for passing on the traditions of the Gond kings verbally

through songs with a musical instrument called the ‘Bana’.

They would invoke the god Bada Dev at the Saja tree by playing the Bana and record the Gond

patrons’ genealogy in song. In return, they would be offered gifts of grain, clothes and maybe even

cattle or gold.

(A small snippet of Bana Player Narayandewn Tekam narrating the story of creation and Bada Dev

for one of our workshops)

Similarities between Gond Art and Aboriginal Art ?

“Gond is very similar to Aboriginal art because the Aborigines have their own stories like we do

about creation, and they too make dashes and dots. Aboriginal art and Gond art have their

connection because we are originally from the same continent of Gondwana when there were just

two continents, Gondwana and Laurasia. India and Australia came from Gondwana and America

came from Laurasia. The performances, dances and rituals, as well as the drink they serve, is like

ours. Their surname is Maravily while ours is Maravi. I spoke at the Monash University in Melbourne

and at the Queensland Art Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane on the theme, ‘You are my brother, in

you I found myself’.” – The Gond Artist Venkat Raman Singh Shyam

The paints are usually derived naturally from objects such as charcoal, coloured soil, plant sap, mud,

flowers, leaves and even cow dung. That said, due to the scarcity of natural colours, Gond artists

have begun to use poster colours and use canvas to paint on. Gond paintings bear a remarkable

likeness aboriginal art from Australia as both styles use dots to create the painting. Both art forms

feature dots of different kinds. For aboriginal art, the dots symbolise territory and dreaming while

with respect to Gond art, the shamans believe that the particles of their bodies disperse into space

to join with those of the spirits and form other bodies. This is an ancestral, poetic vision of the atom,

of the infinitely small joining the infinitely large.

~ Written by Khushi Daryani

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