Ref: 'ABOUT PATA-CHITRA

 Patachitra or scroll painting is an age-old form of popular art, which has been practiced in what is now Bangladesh since the 12th century. Pata painting depicted scenes from religion stories and cultural myths and themes from life in rural Bangladesh. Rular bards and story-tellers would use these scroll which had pictures depicting various events and themes of the stories they would tell. The earliest patuas (as the artists of scroll paintings are called) usually took the themes for their paintings from the Mahabharata, Ramayana, various legends, myths and religious stories and later expanded the range by including many popular and secular stories of the land. One of the most popular themes of the patachitra was the Gazi`s pat depicting the courageous deeds and conquests of Ismail Gazi, a Muslim general who served the Sultan Barbak in the 15th century. Patachitra, like many other popular folk arts of Bangal such as pottery, the weaving of the Muslin and jamdani, and jatra, was practiced in families though generation after generation. The skills and the commitment to the art form were handed down from fathers to their sons.






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