Watch | Why is A.P’s Kalamkari art form struggling for survival?
The Hindu
A video on how the traditional woodblock-printed Kalamkari textile art of Andhra Pradesh is being impacted by the State government’s decision to curb trade of black jaggery, a vital ingredient
This is the traditional woodblock-printed Kalamkari textile art of Andhra Pradesh.
Artists use natural ingredients like jaggery, indigo cake, and pomegranate peel to bring these colours to life.
But this century-old art form is struggling to survive. And the trade of black jaggery, the prime ingredient used, is to blame.
In Kalamkari art, black is considered the ‘mother of all natural dyes’.
In the past few months, a number of black jaggery merchants have been arrested. They are accused of selling the black jaggery to the manufacturers of illicitly distilled liquor. In May, merchants in Andhra Pradesh’s Pedana and Machilipatnam towns declared that they would not sell black jaggery anymore.
This has affected the Kalamkari artists.
Capt. Brijesh Chowta, Dakshina Kannada MP, on Saturday urged Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman to facilitate speeding up of ongoing critical infrastructure works in the region, including Mangaluru-Bengaluru NH 75 widening, establishment of Indian Coast Guard Academy, and merger of Konkan Railway Corporation with the Indian Railways.