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"They
would laugh at my suggestions until the Kabul exhibition was all
sold out," says a confident Arji, a Kabul-based Pakistani ceramist,
of her proteges.
Arjumand
Karim, popularly known as Arji,did her foundation programme in ceramics
from St.Martins College of Art in London and went on to graduate
from Hunerkada, Islamabad, with a major in ceramics. Since the late
'90s she has actively worked in the field and contributed to shows
in Karachi and other cities.
Presently
Arji lives and works in Kabul from where she drives for an hour,
three times a week, into the mountains to Kulalan, an ancient potters'
village to help reinvigorate ancestral crafts in war-torn Afghanistan.
At
our meeting in Karachi's Zenaini Galley, where she had brought an
exhibition of Istalif pottery, Arji disclosed, "It took me
a year to bring them to this level." Not only had kilns been
destroyed during the prolonged war, but many potters had abandoned
their homes to find refuge in safer parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Today as the potters return to their homes, Arji has been commissioned
by ACTED, a French NGO, to help them upgrade their work for sustainable
income generation.
Its
was only natural that the potters- men of all ages- would have difficulty
accepting a woman in a position of authority, that too a Pakistani
and younger than most in age. It was with sheer persistence that
she was able to overcome such cultural and social barriers. The
technical hurdles came in the form of resistance to change in established
techniques as the potters found it difficult to understand the potential
reward of standard control.
The potters traditionally focus on mass production, firing
up to 1000 pots in one kiln load and then selling them in bulk to
local buyers at six Aghanis or 12 cents each. These local buyers
are their main customers, who in turn sell the functional wares
all over Afghanistan. The years of isolation and the absence of
demand for higher quality has made them slip into complacency.
Faced
with this situation, Arji's entire thrust has been technical uplift
to widen their market base. Through a slow yet persistent endeavour,
she began the training by introducing them to basic tools to improve
the finishing of the wares. "Since sharp tools are prohibited
by law on flights to Kabul , after I got the tools made in Islamabad
I had to hire land transport and travel with these tools to Kabul
before I could get the potters to start using them," says Arji
as she recalls the experience.
Better firing techniques come in the form of a new kiln built at
the head potter's house. This kiln, which is installed with shelves,
ensures that pieces are not tightly stacked, a practise that led
to ugly marks and damage to the glazed ware. Many potters are apprehensive
about the cost effectiveness of this this method but they are gradually
coming around.
It
is only recently, after a sellout show in Kabul and now in Karachi,
that a majority of the 30 potters in the Kulalan Village are beginning
to understand the value of quality- control.
Istalif pottery is a regional type also made in north western
Pakistan. Its simple functional forms include platters and bowls.
Unlike the glazed ware with Naqqashi from Multan and Hala, Istalif
pottery does not have a set design template.The colour palette is
predominantly turquoise, leaf green and beige. With these colours
as the base, motifs are either painted, stamped or engraved on the
pot.
As
Arji explains, pottery-making is a family enterprise. While men
prepare the clay and throw and fire the pottery, their children
and womenfolk contribute at the drying stage and embellish them
with motifs while glazing. The freehand patterns seem to be a part
of their larger visual vocabulary and are also used in other crafts
like embroideries and woodwork.
Istalif pottery is glazed earthernware which is fired at
low temperatures. The potter does not have to venture far, the clay
is obtained free of cost from nearby mountainsides and transported
in donkey carts to the village,minerals and plants from which glaze
is obtained are also readily available.Its location - close to the
original source of the raw material - has probably been the reason
for the survival of this ancient village.
Craft revival is not only an economic activity but is deeply
linked to a cultural continuum that informs a people's identity.
This pottery that traces its roots to Central Asia in the north
and Iran in the south occupies a significant historical space for
the people of Afghanistan.
As
Mannan, Javaid and Sultan Mohammed, the Kulalan potters that accompanied
her to this exhibition are introduced as the creators of the exquisite
Istalif pottery, Arji elaborates, "I want to make them self-
reliant. That's why I travel with the potters - so they can get
exposure and take pride in their work ."
This makes clear how the young Pakistani ceramist's commitment
goes beyond craft revival; she wants to help revive confidence and
self-esteem in a people that have lived in a state of war for over
two decades.
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