| Crafts
are an integral part in the life of an Indian, despite
the rapid social and technological changes that are taking
place. In the Western world, special artists create craft
objects and they are considered as luxury items. But in
India like many other developing countries it is the main
source of employment for a vast majority of the population,
next to agriculture. Handicrafts
can be defined simply as objects made by the skill of
the hand and which carry a part of the creator as well
as centuries of evolutionary tradition. It can range
from the simple clay- lamps to the diamond -studded
jewellery items. Handicrafts consists of objects created
by skilled people for religious rituals and for personal
use as well as luxurious ones created by specialized
craftsmen for specific requirements. Handicrafts bring
a great sense of grace to every home be it the poor
hut or the opulent star hotel. There is a timeless quality
in these craft objects, for they have evolved over centuries
and continue to be made even today with the same sentiment.
There are three main classifications
of crafts .
Folk
crafts
Religious
crafts
Commercial
crafts.
Bihar Folk Embroidery People for their personal use,
or for a limited client base create folk crafts. Folk
embroideries done by the village women folk of India
are a good example. There are craftsmen who are specialized
in creating textiles or jewellery which meet the criteria
set up by a particular group of people, usually a particular
caste or community. They have their own distinctive
designs and styles.
Religious crafts are developed around religious centers
and themes. These craft items are connected with religious
institutions and relevant ceremonies. Various religious
places in India are specialized in particular craft
items. For example, Varanasi and Kanchipuram in Tamilnadu
specialize in weaving clothes for religious ceremonies,
particularly silk materials. Similarly Puri in Orissa,
which is a big pilgrim center, is connected with crafts
like patacharita- a painting on cloth and wood and stone
carvings. Bronze lamp used for worship
Specialized craftsmen of
a particular group who are specialized in a particular
skill and who can completely master the craft do commercial
crafts. They even have sub groups, which work for particular
groups, and their tools and techniques may vary. The
Weavers, the Dyers, the Printers, the Goldsmiths and
the Carpenters are some of the commercial craftsmen.
History of crafts in India
Crafts were an important
commodity for world trade and they were a part of the
economy in India, since ancient times. Trade links between
India and the rest of the world existed from ancient
periods. India being the home of cotton had textile
trade with the Far East and the Western world. Indian
textiles and their permanent dyes were accepted throughout
the world. Roman trade documents mention that silk was
exported from India to Europe from the 6th century A.D.
The Arab sailors brought silver and gold from their
countries and took back shiploads of handicraft objects
from India to the Far- East. In the North, caravans
carried woven textiles along the Silk route and went
right unto Moscow by the Fur- route.
Under the good patronage
of the early Mughals, India's handicrafts reached its
pinnacle of perfection. Crafts like carpets, textiles
and jewellery were developed into fine arts. The famed
Mughal Emperors namely Akbar, Shah Jahan and Jehangir
invited skilled craftsmen from all over the world and
blend their native ideas with our own techniques and
skills. Brocading and velvet manufacturing developed
rapidly in India than in their native countries. But
with the break- up of the Mughal Empire and the growing
enmity between the smaller Princely states, local crafts
lost their centuries- old local patronage. With the
East India Company coming to India, the volume of trade
reduced though they managed to strive.
England flooded the Indian
market with its cheap machine-made items, which ousted
the homemade crafts. A number of craftsmen were turned
destitutes overnight. Those who continued with their
craft had to compete with the machine-made goods, that
quality was made to suffer. Gandhiji's Swadeshi movement
focused on the plight of the Indian craftsmen and on
the need for maintaining the ancient craft traditions.
After Independence, The
Handicrafts Board was set up to look into the plight
of the dying crafts. Slowly demand grew for these items
both at home and also abroad. Recent export figures
show that India is lagging behind in many handicraft
commodities except in the case of gems and jewellery
items.
Despite the growth of handicrafts
industry in India, the average earnings of the craftsmen
when compared to other fields is very low. Hence the
younger generation is moving onto other fields with
only the elder craftsmen left over. The average age
of many master craftsmen is around 50 years.
Improving educational system
and lifestyles of the middle class people contribute
a lot for the eroding of the native crafts in India.
Cheap plastic items have now flooded the market and
people have left out the age-old clay and metal containers.
They do not understand the harmfulness of plastic items,
which may react with their food . Also they have moved
onto wearing synthetic clothes avoiding good, comfortable
and cheap cotton woven items, just for their patterns
and cost.
The need of the hour is
assistance for the craftsmen to improve their techniques,
availability of good raw materials, direct marketing
channels, credit and enough wages and socio-economic
benefits
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