MAJULI MASK - ART & CULTURE

News: Assam's Majuli Gets GI Tag for Mask Making, Manuscript Painting

 

What's in the news?

       Traditional Majuli masks of Assam were given a Geographical Indication (GI) tag by the Centre. Majuli manuscript painting also got the Gl label.

 

Key takeaways:

       Majuli, the largest river island in the world and the seat of Assam's neo-Vaishnavite tradition, has been home to the art of mask-making since the 16th century.

 

Majuli Masks:

       The handmade masks are traditionally used to depict characters in bhoonas, or theatrical performances with devotional messages under the neo-Vaishnavite tradition, introduced by the 15th-16th century reformer saint Sankardeva.

       The masks can depict gods, goddesses, demons, animals and birds-Ravana, Garuda, Narasimha, Hanuman, Varaha Surpanakha all feature.

       They can range in size from those covering just the face (mukh mukha), which take around five days to make, to those covering the whole head and body of the performer (cho mukha), which can take up to one-and-a-half months to make.

       According to the application made for the patent, the masks are made of bamboo, clay, dung, cloth, cotton, wood and other materials available in the riverine surroundings of their makers,

 

Practised in Monsteries:

       Sattras are monastic institutions established by Srimanta Sankardev and his disciples as centres of religious, social and cultural reform.

       Today, they are also centres of traditional performing arts such as borgeet (songs), xattriya (dance) and bhaana (theatre), which are an integral part of the Sankardev tradition.

       Majuli has 22 sattras, and the patent application states that the mask making tradition is concentrated in four of them Samaguri Sattra, Natun Samaguri Sattra, Bihimpur Sattra, Alengi Narasimha Sattra.

       Hemchandra Goswami, sattrad- hikar or the administrative head of the Samaguri Sattra and a well-known practitioner of the art, said that while the masks were traditionally made only for bhaonas, over the past couple of decades, the Samaguri sattra has been trying to promote mask-making as an art form in its own right.

 

Go back to basics:

Majuli Paintings:

       It is a form of painting, also originating in the 16th century, done on sanchi pat, or manuscripts made of the bark of the sanchi or agar tree, using homemade ink.

       This art was patronised by Ahom kings.