Scroll On: Naya Patuas Sing Out the Coronavirus

Abstract

This online exhibition is a digital compilation of the brilliantly conceived and executed aesthetic representations of the Coronavirus by the patuas or hereditary singer painters of Naya, a village in the Medinipur district of West Bengal, through the medium of pats or scroll paintings. The exhibition’s title is borrowed from the patuas’ visualisation of the virus as a demon or an evil spirit in their folk iconography and their optimistic belief that they can exorcise or ‘sing out’, in Dukhushyam Chitrakar’s words, the Coronademon or Coronadanav. The exhibition is a virtual walk through 22 jarana pats or long visual narrative scrolls, each accompanied by a song, and 10 eye-catching chauka or square posters created by the Naya patuas that hopes to provide the visitor an auditory and visual experience their affective and cognitive response to the deadly virus. The singer painters featured include both senior, internationally acclaimed patuas and new, emerging ones led by their 80-year-old mentor Dukhushyam Chitrakar. The scrolls follow a six part thematic sequence. The first panel in the majority of the scrolls is filled with a terrifying image of the coronadanav or virus in bright colours conveying anger, horror and dread. The panels that follow, on the other hand, display wide stylistic and thematic variations. Most scrolls conclude on a note of optimism about overpowering the virus through battling it bravely.

Presenters

Anjali Gera Roy
Professor, Humanities & Social Sciences, IIT Kharagpur, West Bengal, India

Details

Presentation Type

Innovation Showcase

Theme

2022 Special Focus—Here Comes the Metaverse: Designing the Virtual and the Real

KEYWORDS

Scroll painter, Naya, Coronademon, Jarana Pat, Chauka Pat

Digital Media

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