Author: Nilanjana Bhowmick
Publication: Little India
Date: September 15, 2008
URL: http://www.littleindia.com/news/135/ARTICLE/3798/2008-09-15.html
Kumortuli is India's potter street.
Overseas Bengalis throughout the Diaspora
are feverishly preparing for Dasshera, arguably the world's biggest festival
in terms of people participation, in October. But Durga, the goddess at the
heart of their festivities, began her journey across the seven seas several
months earlier from Kumortuli, the nationally renowned potter's street in
North Kolkata, where the vast majority of India's giant Dasshera statues are
created.
During the past two decades, overseas Indian
organizations from the United States and England to Canberra, Lisbon and Amsterdam,
have sourced statues for their Dasshera celebrations from the artisans of
Kumortuli.
Studios and workshops line both sides of the
street and surrounding alleys in Kumortuli, which literally means potters
colony. The studios are dingy and dark and a visitor is likely to wonder how
the artisans can create such beautiful and flawless idols year after year.
Every studio is choc a bloc with 7 to 10 huge Durga idols and scores of smaller
deities. As many idols are 5 to 7 feet high, the artisans work from atop a
ladder. During the monsoons, the streets are often slippery as rainwater combines
with the clay heaped around the studios. In the bigger studios, helpers bring
the clay inside for artists, but in smaller studios artist sit and work near
the clay heap. An estimated 400 artisans and 2,000 other workers live and
work in the narrow bylanes of Kumortuli, building an estimated 6,000 clay
idols annually for the domestic market.
Kumortuli exported 50 idols to 20 countries
worldwide in 2007. While the overseas orders are small, each one is worth
10 times the price of a domestic order, so it's impact is far more significant
than the numbers might suggest. The vast majority of the overseas orders are
from the United States, followed by the U.K. and Canada. In recent years,
orders are trickling in from South East Asia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Russia, Austria
and Poland.
The worship of Goddess Durga is a major event
in the Bengali calendar. It is a special time not only for Hindu Bengalis
in West Bengal, but for millions of other Hindus spread all over the world.
Orders from overseas associations and clubs like the Cardiff Hindu Cultural
Organization, Cambridge Bengali Association, Bengali Association of Southern
California, etc., start six months in advance. Almost every Bengali association
abroad celebrates the festival and many order the idols from Kumortuli every
year.
In India, the festival is traditionally celebrated
over five days, but overseas the celebrations are typically squeezed into
a weekend. Earlier, the statues were worshipped and then packed away for use
the following year, even though tradition requires them to be immersed in
the Ganges. Recently, however, some countries like the United Kingdom have
begun allowing immersion of the idol in the Thames River, leading to a spurt
in demand for Durga idols from Kumortuli.
Kumortuli churns out around $250,000 worth of idols for the overseas market
every year, according to Mintu Pal, general secretary of the Kumortuli Mrith
Shilpi Association. Shipping of the idols for export begins in the first week
of July. While some studios courier the idols by air, most are shipped by
sea, which can take two to three months.
The overseas orders, although constrained by shipping costs, are becoming
ever more ambitious. While earlier the demand was for five feet tall idols,
this year organizations in New Jersey and California have ordered seven feet
tall idols, according to Pradyut Pal, who claims to be the first in Kumortuli
to establish a website to cater to overseas clients with the aim of eliminating
the middlemen, who eat into their profit margins.
Amarnath Ghosh began shipping idols made out
of pith overseas in 1989. His idols were flown to Sweden, Australia, Malaysia
and Nigeria. The images were very light, weighing under 8 lbs. Today his sons
carry on with tradition, sending the most idols, made of paper pulp, pith
or fiber glass, every year to overseas destinations. In 2007 he shipped 20
idols and expects to top that number this year.
His son Kaushik Ghosh, who has also established
a website, says their business is now exclusively export oriented: "The
quality of our work separates us from everyone else. Every Kumortuli artisan
sends 2-3 idols every year abroad, but we send the highest number of idols
every year. We do not have time to take local orders and our entire year gets
blocked with overseas order."
Ghosh recalls that their first order two decades ago had come from a neighbor,
who had migrated to the United States. Today, he knows he needs to improvise
to retain his hold over the overseas market. He is helped in the task by his
sister in law who is settled in the U.S., a website that promotes him globally
and Skype, which he uses to interact with his overseas clients.
Kumortuli is now a well-known NRI brand, their
first and often last stop in their quest for a Durga idol. The prices are
steep by Indian standards. Pradyut Pal charges between $6,000 to $12,500 for
an idol. He says that the competition is a lot tougher now as the market is
expanding with new players: "There was a point of time when Kumortuli
used to be chosen destination for NRIs who wanted to order a Durga idol. However
that is not so anymore. There are so many people who come to learn at my workshop
and then they go out and work on their own or with someone else. It does affect
me, but it also encourages and challenges me to stay on top of my competition."
For most artisans in Kumortuli, overseas orders
are appealing as they come during their down time. Overseas orders are also
financially more lucrative, although they demand a lot more perfection too.
The business at Kumortuli is seasonal in nature, so artisans spend a considerable
time of the year without work. Overseas orders start trickling in around December
and January, soon after the current year's celebrations are over, whereas
local orders only begin pouring in toward the end of June and early July.
Debabrata Pal has been making idols with his
father for the past 50 years and in the last few years has sold idols abroad
as well. This year he secured an order from the U.S. to build one idol at
a cost of $6,000. Previously, he worked through an agency, but not any longer.
He says that agents often play dirty when it comes to payment. He is also
deliberating about floating his own website to publicize his creative services.
For him the real competition lies in the possibility that soon people might
start making the idols abroad. "There are many people who come here to
learn in our workshops from abroad. I won't be surprised if very soon people
would start getting into this business from there. Now that will really affect
our trade."
Prasanto Pal is a new entrant in the overseas
market. He launched his website a year ago and this year secured three offers
from Canada. He uses an agent, charging $1,000 to $1,700 per idol. After paying
the agency, he makes a profit of $120 to $170. He is waiting for his website
to catch on before dispensing with his agents.
Prasanto Pal, however, prefers local orders,
which are priced at almost a tenth of overseas orders (between $250 to $350
for the large clay idols) to overseas ones, which are made of pith or fiber
glass, because he feels the profits don't justify the added hassles of transporting
the idols to their destinations. However, he admits that overseas contracts
help them in gathering more local orders. "Local customers are always
impressed if they know that we have been sending idols abroad. So it gains
us prestige and credibility and attracts local customers. We prefer local
orders more though as they provide us our bread and butter throughout the
year. Overseas orders are just stop gap arrangements."
The Internet is coming to Kumortuli big time.
Many studios have started their own websites and are dealing with clients
directly. Many in the present generation of artisans are educated and technology
savvy and those who are not are either striving hard to catch up or taking
the help of technologically aware family members. The Internet dispenses with
the need for agents who skim the studio's profits.
Mintu Pal says that on average an idol for
the overseas market costs $2,500 in Kumortuli, although the rates vary by
studio and complexity. Pal says, "The middleman takes away most of the
money. How many people have their own websites? Only a handful. We also get
work from people who come to Kumortuli to place their orders. But these are
few and for most of the orders, most of the artisans have to depend on agents.
On average the agents take away 50 per cent of our earnings."
The most direct threat to the artisans of
Kumortuli comes from local competitors who are beginning to crop up, creating
what is known as a parallel Kumortuli. Dev Ranjan Dey, of Dev Exports, who
has two workshops in the outskirts of West Bengal, where artisans execute
the designs made his team, says his product and prices are better than those
of Kumortuli. "Kumortuli is not our competition," he says. "The
images from Kumortuli are very high priced. However, we are not here to break
their monopoly, but to offer an alternative option to people who would want
it."
Dev's idols for overseas markets are priced
at $2,600, including shipping and handling. His marketing strategy is modern
and streamlined. He says, "Every time when we send an idol, we always
put a surprise gift in the box, be it festival issues of magazines or festival
CDs and cassettes. It always gives our clients a lot of happiness." And
it ensures goodwill and word of mouth publicity.
The competition has strengthened the resolve
of Kumortuli artisans to compete effectively against new players who are entering
the market with snazzy marketing strategies and better offers.
Mintu Pal says: "There is no dearth of
talent in West Bengal, but Kumortuli is part of Kolkata's heritage. We have
the best artisans from all over the state working here. No one can compete
with that. No matter where people have their studios and who they work with,
originally all artisans hail from Kumortuli. No one can take away this from
us."
In any event, even as competitors grow, the
client base is expanding too. The latest entrant is Qatar, a Muslim country
that bans idol worship. However, when a Bengali association got in touch with
Dey, they brainstormed to create a Durga image, which legally cannot be classified
as an idol. They came up with a 3D effect on a terracotta tile, which can
be carried in a suitcase as an artifact. And this year it is expected to fly
to Qatar in September for the celebrations.