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T H E H I N D U O P P O R T U N I T I E S A Guide to Better Positions and Better Performance Wednesday, December 06, 2000 |
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HRD COUNSELLING An interview with Mrs. Jayashree Bhat, art conservator INTACH & Chitrakala Parishat Art Conservation Centre, Bangalore.
TELL US briefly as to how you got involved in the field of art
restoration?
After I completed my degree in fine arts I found out that INTACH
had opened a centre in Bangalore, and were looking for a trainee.
I got selected after being interviewed and went through a 6-month
training during which I was systematically introduced to the
field. Later I went to Lucknow for further training in the
specialised field of paper conservation. Art restoration is a
unique field and there is ample scope for people who are
artistically inclined. I derive immense job satisfaction, as each
day is an adventure because you are faced with different kinds of
challenges.
How is the field placed in India as a career option?
In India, monetary benefits are not very high. However, abroad
this is a flourishing field and there are a lot of private
conservators too. Here there is a lack of awareness and not much
support from government and private organisations. We don't have
the proper resources nor is there any great public demand. Unless
we realise the worth of our cultural wealth, there is no chance
of saving it.
Tell us about some of the projects you have worked on?
I was involved in the restoration of a sacred document from a
Vadalur muth in Tamil Nadu. The document was more than a 100
years old, the words were undecipherable and all the sandalwood
paste they had smeared had further harmed the document.
So it had to be handled very carefully. Special lamination
techniques were used to restore it. The muth members were so
happy with the job that they took us all to Vadalur, and honoured
us!
I was also involved in the restoration of a very old Ravi Verma
painting that was in the possession of the Airforce Technical
College, Bangalore.
Since the paining was very old we couldn't bring it back to the
lab. We had to set up our lab in a tiny room on their premises.
This was another project, which I enjoyed a lot. It was a time-
bound project because they wanted to exhibit the painting for
their function.
I was also involved in the restoration of photographs, prints,
and watercolours at the Kumarkrupa Guest house in Bangalore. What
kind of people fit into this field of work?
A most essential qualification is that the candidate should love
the field of arts and be able to appreciate the worth of the
intricacies involved. People from the field of fine arts and
chemistry can join us.
An ideal candidate would be a person with a chemistry background
and an artistic inclination. This combination is rather difficult
to find!
This job requires a lot of patience; a fine eye for detail and it
can be a very slow and laborious work.
What are the different work areas involved in this field?
Preventive conservation and curative conservation are the two
major work areas in this field. What we do falls under the
category of curative conservation.
We also conduct training programmes for museum curators, because
unlike museums abroad ours are not equipped with conservation
labs. The curators lack the basic knowledge of handling and
maintenance of the artefacts, so these programmes are geared
towards educating them. Other than that we also hold programmes
to spread awareness amongst the public regarding the importance
of preserving the rich cultural heritage of our country.
How much of your work comes from private collectors and how much
from the government concerns?
Sixty percent of our work comes from private collectors, art
connoisseurs, and 40 percent from the government institutions. I
find that there is a general feeling of indifference towards
conservation of art and heritage, especially among people who are
in public office. A lot of our cultural wealth is slowly being
lost due to sheer neglect and apathy.
There seems to be a misconception that art restoration means
making the old artefacts look new. Your comments on that. This
misconception again stems from a lack of awareness. People don't
seem to realise that the worth of antiques is defined according
to their age. This misconception has lead to the destruction of
many of a mural in the temples of Tamil Nadu. Art restoration is
a fine balance between saving the artefacts from ruin and at the
same preserving the maturity it has undergone over the years,
because that's what makes it valuable.
MALINI SURYANARAYANAN
malini-skindiainfo.com
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