Traditionally the p ainters are known as chitrakars. Their
painting the 'pattachitra' resemble the old murals of that region, dating back to the 5th
century BC. The best work is found in and around Puri, especially in the village of
Raghurajpur.
Pattachitra is a traditional craft, delicately painted on primed cloth or patta in the
finest detail. The themes usually depict the Jagannath temple with its three deities -
Lord Jagannath, his brother Balabhadra and sister Subhadra and the famous Rath Yatra
festival. These paintings were originally substitutes for worship on days when the temple
doors were shut for the 'ritual bath' of the deity. Many Pattachitra paintings are from
the ancient Indian texts of Vishnu and Krishna. The paintings are of various shapes and
sizes. A recent modification in Pattachitra paintings is the division of the Patta into a
row full of squares with the high-point of the story in the larger centre square and
various events portrayed in the other squares, not unlike the Kalamkari paintings.
The chitrakars prepare, what looks like a hard card paper using layers of old Dhoti cloth
and sticking them together with a mixture of chalk and tamarind seed gum, which gives the
surface a smooth leathery finish especially after it is rubbed with a conch shell. The
theme is sketched with a pencil, then outlined with a fine brush using vivid earth and
stone colours obtained from natural sources, like the white pigment prepared from conch
shells, yellow from orpiment, red from cinnabar and black from lamp soot. After
completion, the painting is held over red hot charcoals, and lac mixed with resin powder
is sprinkled over the surface, when this melts, it is rubbed over the entire surface to
give a coating of lac.
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