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Playing cards of yore
IN the 16th Century in Orissa, circular cards with exquisite
paintings on them - an art called Ganjapa - were very popular
among the people of Ganjam; they were used to play ordinary card
games.
Ganjapa, also called "Ganjifa" is derived from a Persian word
"Gajife". The earliest mention of Ganjapa is in 1527 A.D. in the
memoirs of Emperor Babur.
Ganjapa cards differed in size and style and from place to place.
For instance, those in Raghurajpur (Puri) and Ganjam are three
inches in diameter while in Sonepur district they are smaller.
The cards are arranged in sets in packs of different numbers such
as 46, 96, 120, 144 and so on. Each pack has sets of 12 cards,
with each set being a different colour.
Based on the number of colours in a set, the packs are called
atharangi (eight colours), dasarangi (10 colours), bararangi (12
colours), chaudarangi (14 colours) and sholarangi (16 colours). A
maximum of 24 colours are used. Of these, the atharangi is the
most common.
The themes used vary from common decorations to figurative
representations of the Ramayana, the 10 incarnations of Vishnu,
and gods and goddesses of Hindu mythology. They vary from region
to region and are in Odissi style.
There are eight suits in a pack of cards, each one recognisable
by a distinct background colour. Each suit has 10 numbered cards
and a king and vizier. The king is the highest in value with the
vizier coming next, followed by the series in descending order.
The king is distinguished as either sitting, or with legs folded
at the knees, while the vizier is depicted standing. Sometimes,
the king is on a chariot and the minister mounted on a horse. In
some other sets, the king is recognised by his two heads, while
the minister is shown with one head. Somewhere on the card is
another head of an animal.
Eka, Douka, Teeka, Chouka, Pancha, Chhaka or Atha are the numbers
of the cards. The horse, rat, Ganesha, Kartika, lotus or fish are
the figures generally used.
Exotic Ganjapa cards were popular while luxury cards engraved on
plates of wood were exclusive.
Making a Ganjapa card is an art that resembles pata chitra. A
piece of cloth is dipped several times in a glue made of tamarind
seeds and then dried to make it crisp. Circles are cut out of the
cloth with a hollow iron cylinder. Two such circles of cloth, or
a circle each of cloth and paper are pasted together. Finally a
paste of chalk powder is applied. After this has dried, paints
made from lac dye are used to make a base for painting. Cards are
hand-printed.
The cards are mainly done by the women folk of artisan families.
They prepare the cloth sheets, tamarind glue and traditional
colour and lacquer paste at home. Male artists paint figures on
the cards.
Colours are used to distinguish the figures. For instance, in the
Dasavatara series, blue is used to depict Vishnu avatara (the
incarnation of Vishnu). Green personifies Rama, with red as a
background colour. In Matsya avatara, white is used for the
figure (fish) with black as a background colour. Kuchha avatara
is shown in green, with background yellow as a contrast colour.
These cards do not require fine artistic endeavours, but take a
long time to prepare. A set of Ganjapa cards takes at least 10
days to make.
Today, the tradition of making Ganjapa cards is on the verge of
extinction.
Ganjapa cards are also expensive, costing between Rs. 1,000 and
Rs. 1,200 per set. Sometimes tourists buy the cards for
decorative purposes or as glass covers.
Will future generations stare and wonder at the beautiful hand-
painted circular playing cards with no one to explain the game to
them?
MONALISA JENA
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