Kumortuli (Kumor - Potter, Tuli - Quarters) is a locality in Calcutta where artists and sculptors have been making clay idols of gods and goddesses for seasonal worship for more than 200 years. It is a hereditary skill, and families have been employed in it for generations. The idols are made usually with a skeleton of bamboo, flesh of straw and skin of clay. They are then dried, painted, clothed and wigged. The most famous goddess of the Bengalis - Durga - has her own 5-day festival during September/October (depending on the lunar calendar), and the preparations start from beginning of August.










4 comments:
Superb narration Of the whole process. It cannot be better done.
impressive.......well compiled.......follow it up with an epilogue of the actual Puja, pandals and the general fanfare in Calcutta during the Durga Puja if possible
ever wondered what do Kumortuli artisans live 'on' for the rest of the year ? surely, Durga Puja is the only bountiful time, but what about the rest of the year (which gives little scope of income barring the occassional smaller Pujas like Saraswati Puja, Jagadhattri Puja etc.) ?
Ghorer pashe eto shilpi jader dekheo dekhini..tader katha mone koriye dili.
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