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Articles

An Artisanal History of Kalam?

 

Abstract

The dyed, painted, and printed cotton of the Coromandel Coast from South East India are popularly known as Kalamkari, kalam meaning a pen and kari indicating to handwork. The waqai or news reports of the Golconda court from the 1670s mention this term, which is perhaps one of the early archival records of the usage of kalamkari in Deccan. A bamboo pen with a thick grip made of cotton and cotton threads is used for making the painted textiles. While the term “kalam” is generally employed to indicate both painted and printed textile, scholarly studies have not clarified how the pen is crucial in printed textile making. During my fieldwork, I found wooden block makers in the Bandar region of Andhra Pradesh, on the Coromandel Coast, use the term kalam to specify the iron engraving tools for block carving. The artisanal usage of this term expands the meaning of kalam beyond a pen and suggests how artisanal understanding of the histories of practice can offer fresh perspectives on material culture histories and the interconnections between painted and printed textile making. Furthermore, the term is also used by the Bidri metalware artisans from the Deccan region to denote the iron engraving tools for carving, which suggests that dyed textile making in the Coromandel region is also connected to other craft activities in Deccan. This case study, focused on the term kalam, calls for better integration of artisanal insights into the scholarly studies on textiles and material culture. In my paper, I explore the etymological roots of the term kalam in literary works, and its use and transformation as a tool, among the textile practitioners and other artisanal communities in the Deccan and Coromandel regions.

Acknowledgment

This paper was intended to be part of the upcoming “Textile Society of America 16th Biennial Symposium 2018,” Vancouver, Canada, under the panel titled Crossing Borders: Exchange, Localization and Innovation in India’s Printed and Painted Cottons, organized by Dr. Sarah Fee and Prof. Eiluned Edwards. I am grateful to Dr. Sarah Fee for providing me this opportunity and her continued support to do the necessary research for this paper. I am also thankful to Prof. T’ai Smith, Prof. Eiluned Edwards, Prof. Kathleen Wyma, Prof. Baishali Ghosh, and Prof. Sylvia Houghteling for their insightful comments and suggestions to develop this paper. The fieldwork in Southern India was supported by “Kau Shao Ching Graduate Travel Award in Art History,” University of British Columbia (2015–2016), and “IARTS Textiles of India Grant,” the Royal Ontario Museum (2017–2018). Finally, I want to convey my gratitude to the Textile Society of America and Prof. Wendy Weiss for inviting me to submit this paper for this collaborative issue.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Rajarshi Sengupta

Rajarshi Sengupta is a practitioner and a PhD candidate in art history at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. [email protected]

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