Standing up for the cause of art
By Reeta
Sharma
THIS week, internationally
acknowledged dancers of our country unitedly expressed
their distress at the ever- shrinking coverage of the
arts in the media. Even the expression of protest was as
elegant and visually attractive as are their majestic
dance movements. They all wore black sarees as a mark of
protest. Its another matter that black made them look all
the more stunning. Besides the photos clicked and
published in various newspapers had a dazzling effect.
The agitators included the best of our dancers like Sonal
Mansingh, Leela Samson, Uma Sharma, Swapan Sundari,
Bharti Shivaji, Prerna Shrimali, Geeta Chandran, Madhvi
Mudgal, Amita Ratnam etc.
The dancers pointed out
that the media was paying less and less attention to the
arts which has resulted in the dwindling coverage. Both
the print and the electronic media were treating
performing and other arts in the shabbiest possible
manner, they said. For instance, classical dances are
slotted at unearthly hours for telecast. The artiste, who
was once central to the vitality of culture, is today
relegated to the fringes.
They earnestly expressed
the opinion that it was medias responsibility to
promote culture, arts and artists. To make art a
peoples movement, media has to play an active role.
However, in the absence of coverage on the part of the
media, besides constructive patronage from other
quarters, many arts of our country are dying. For
instance, there is only one Kerala family left which
makes masks for Kathakali performances. Scores of other
artisans in this line have discontinued their association
for lack of promotion and patronage.
I personally feel that
the renowned dancers made a point but have yet to touch
upon the vast enormity of the overall degenerating
effects. There is no denying the fact that the media puts
the arts at the bottom of its priority list. The
decision-makers in each type of media are too
pre-occupied with matters which wield power. For them,
every other subject is more important than culture.
Today, either our arts
are treated like a dessert after a heavy meal in print
media, or weighed against revenue generation potential in
the electronic media. Why Hindi films full of vulgarity,
sex and violence are slotted for prime time? Why all
sorts of junk-pop numbers are shown at prime time? All
questions have answers in the so-called revenue
generation strategies of various channels.
Today, a sponsorer would
laugh at a director who wishes to present traditional
pure arts like Indian classical singing, dancing, or
various types of folk forms. Can you imagine somebody
displaying paintings on television from all corners of
India? Our viewers would simply switch off the channel.
But you cant blame them. The electronic media has
made them addicts of superfast action, ruthless violence,
and heavy duty editing. They have fed them such trash
that viewers have lost the appetite for anything
classical in nature. Superficiality and frivolity are at
play because they generate revenue. Has our electronic
media ever tried to pause and think about its role and
its far-reaching consequences?
As for the role of the
print media, the end result is the same --- ever
shrinking space for coverage of the arts. It is not a
matter of space only. The print media has not taken it as
its responsibility to search and cultivate critics who
would themselves have some foundation in the arts.
Leaving aside a few, almost every publication has dealt
with the coverage of culture and arts as something not
very important. So in our Chandigarh, a cub-reporter is
sent to cover Kishori Amonkars recital, Amjad Ali
Khans sarod-vadan, Abida Parvins Sufiana
kalaam, Aparna Kaurs painting exhibition, Sonal
Mansinghs Bharatnatyam, Uma Sharmas Kathak,
Hari Prasad Chaurasias bansuri-vadan or a
play produced by either professionals or amateurs.
Its not only humiliating but also extremely
offensive that people having no background or claim to
arts should cover these events. But do the performers
have any choice but to remain superficially sweet to such
cub-reporters?
And what would an
inexperienced reporter, without any knowledge of a
particular art, write about? Surely, either excessive
appreciation and frivolous comments or criticism born out
of either ignorance or cynicism. Can we blame the
reporter? Well, only partially. The real blame lies with
the authorities who assign them such coverage. A
cub-reporter can hardly refuse an assignment.
I remember once Sitara
Devi performed in the city and left the audience
spell-bound with her majestic movements. A reporter
called her movements "sensuous." Sitara was
outraged. She stormed into the office of the publication
to express her indignation.
Similarly, years back
Kavita and Vinod Nagpal had staged Bakri at Tagore
Theatre in Chandigarh. Next morning, they were very
amused to read the reviews published in the local Press.
They lacked depth and the reporters clearly had no clue
to the symbolism weaved into the play.
Then our city was lucky
to have a very creative and imaginative director in Kumar
Verma. He was a gold medalist from the National School of
Drama and had joined the Department of Indian Theatre at
the Panjab University as a lecturer in the late
seventies. Besides his class-room productions, he staged
many plays outside the department, including Udhavast
Dharamshala, House of Bernarda Elba, Baki Ittihas,
Death Watch, etc. But unfortunately every time the
reviews were not only inadequate but also extremely
depressing and annoying. Since he was a sensitive
director, it used to upset him to think that people
unconnected to theatre would sit on judgement on his
productions.
Amateur theatre, folk
forms, painting, sketching, handicrafts and artisans are
the worst hit by the lack of appropriate attention by the
media. In fact, both the electronic and the print media
display a certain kind of contempt for amateurs. They are
weighed against professionals and hence do not get the
space that they deserve.
That art and culture are
our heritage that ought to be passed on to the next
generation is forgotten not only by the media but by the
authorities as well. Artist(e)s cannot survive on their
own because we have vitiated the performing world with
crass commercialism. Hence only the highly professional
and the established survive. Its amazing that for
one performance lakhs are paid but for promoting
promising amateurs spending even a few thousands is
projected as an act of favour. This vast difference is
reflected in the coverage by the media as well.
Departments in the
governments who have the funds at their command to
promote culture and art have by and large become dens of
exploitation. This is because they are mostly headed by
people who are not sensitive to the world of culture and
art.
To conclude, its
not only the media but various other agencies also who
ought to realise the impact of our arts on our future
generations. Hence, it is their moral duty to give this
world of art its long-denied due.
|