Abstract:
The salt marshes of Kutch have always been intriguing. Be it the colourful craft amidst
the monotonous landscape or the natural calamities that the region has endured, this
region has always been the subject of curious interest to many. Essentially famous for
its vivid variety of crafts, Kutch is a proud home to an interesting number of craft
villages sprawled all across the region. These villages are not only thriving but
consistently establish the identity of the Saurashtra region of the state of Gujarat.
For the artisans of Kutch, the craft is not just a means of livelihood, it is a way of life.
They art of craft making has been passed down through generations within families,
keeping the tradition and the craft alive through centuries. The people are born and
brought up amidst the craft which given identity to the family, the village and the
region. As such with the advent of industrialisation, the craft making industry was sidelined to give way to the machine produced craft. Their incomes are very limited
thereby forcing the artisans to abandon their craft, and move to the city to work as
labour. Overtime, the architecture of this region also has been found to swerve from
its roots and adopt a “modern” or rather a westernized outlook.
With the wave of modernism, their mud houses were replaced with steel
and concrete buildings. They were eager to shed their backward mud and thatch
image and adopt the “modern” image. A blind aping of the western built structures
was marring the traditional and quintessential Kutch landscape which ultimately
resulted in massive destruction during the 2001 Bhuj earthquake. Kisho Kurokawa in his
book “The Philosophy of Symbiosis” argued that technology does not take root when
it is cut off from culture and tradition. Transfer of technology requires adaptation to
the region, the unique situations and customs. We must expect our settlements to
adapt around change rather than uproot a culture to give way to a pre-existing
notion of what it should be.
On a deeper retrospect, after the Bhuj Earthquake it was observed that the
traditional/ vernacular houses survived the disaster while all the new buildings lay in
shambles. These traditional buildings are a result of years of endurance to nature
perfected time and again by its users over generations. But the question remained -
how to reinstate their new found image of modernity? Hence, the need to reinvent
the traditional house is realized. Post disaster, the state of Gujarat also recognized the
value and importance of the crafts as the primary livelihood of the artisans and began
to invest in their promotion. The government initiated several housing schemes to
rehabilitate the poverty-stricken artisans and give them back their livelihood. This
project is one such an initiative.
This paper aims to study the existing craft villages, their way of life, work and
social construct in order to re-create the village atmosphere in a centre for the
promotion of arts and crafts.