Dhokra Craft

Environment

Dastkari Haat Samiti

Dastkari Haat Samiti

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Community (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Mineral Rich State of Jharkhand

Jharkhand is considered a relatively new state as it became a politically independent entity within the federal structure of India only in 2002. In complete contrast, archeologists have found evidence of Neolithic celts, materials used for smelting, wheel made pottery and iron and copper tools from the Chalcolithic period. Magadha, the ancient kingdom of India, situated in what is now west-central Bihar state in northeastern India, was the nucleus of several larger kingdoms or empires between 6th century BCE and 8th century CE. Some scholars claim the area was already a distinct geo-political, cultural entity called Jharkhand during the Maghada Empire. People have lived in this area since the Stone Age.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Environment (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Trees in the area of Ramgarh district are scarce. Some branches are cut for fuel by dhokra artisans.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Environment (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Hard labour is required to chop wood for fuel in the hot summer sun.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Environment (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Malhar dhokra artisans chop a small branches into smaller pieces to use for their furnace where the wax or tar is melted during the making of an item during the dhokra, or lost wax process.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Environment (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

The chopped wood is carried back in baskets on their heads.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Community (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

A local boy sits on a pile of coal, which is in abundance as the area is rich in mineral resources.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Community of master artisans (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

The Tribes of Jharkhand

There are 30 tribes who live in Jharkhand, some of whom are known to have been iron smelters and possessing expert knowledge on working with iron and other metals. While millennia have passed, certain people among its tribal population still work, however primitively, making metal objects reflecting millennia gone by. To continue a practice that goes back eons shows how certain cultures and skills have a unique way of carrying on unchanged amidst vast changes and technological developments around them. 

Madhav Malhar on the left, Moti Malhar at the centre and Dilip Mahar on the right are dhokra craft practitioners.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Community of master artisans (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Madhav Malhar on the left, Moti Malhar at the centre and Dilip Mahar on the right sit outside their simple roughly constructed home after having demonstrated their dhokra craft process.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Old pieces from metal containers or items which are discarded are used as the raw material for metal casting.

They are bought from nearby metal utensil shops.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Discarded metal containers or scrap metal is used for the raw material for metal casting.

Artisans obtain this from metal utensil shops nearby.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Dhokra Craft: The Lost Wax Process

Known commonly as cire perdue or investment casting, the lost wax process called dhokra was also practiced in the Indus Valley civilization and in Egypt from the third millennium BC. It is still a part of tribal lives and products in parts of India with a large tribal population. While many tribal communities have moved to margins of cities and have taken to other kinds of work, many still live in forests and deal in forest produce and farming or inhabit areas rich in mineral deposits where some work in mining.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

To fire the furnace, wood from the nearby jungle is used as a fuel.

The dhokra artisan chops the logs into smaller pieces using an axe.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Making the mould out of mud is the first step in the process. The artisans use a mixture of local mud with rice chaff, which helps in binding the whole form.

The design is prepared at this stage.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Clay moulds are dried under the open sun and kept for one day.

After they are completely dried, a layer of tar threads are wrapped on it depending on the detailing required of the design.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

As a step towards making dhokra items, the clay mud model is made first of the desired design. It is a mixture of locally available mud and rice chaff.

The mud mould is further dried under the open sun until it hardens.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

The broken pieces of scrap metal have to be weighed before they undergo the firing process.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Smaller pieces of metal scrap are filled inside the mould which are ready for casting.

Due to the high temperature inside the pit, the metal pieces melt and take the shape of the mould.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Tar is easily procured from road construction sites nearby. It is used instead of wax as a main raw material in dhokra craft.

The artisans make threads out of tar, as it acts like wax, and can be twisted to any desired form or shape.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

The area which has furnace pit is cut off from the rest of the house.

This process is done in a small area. The firing process is done to get rid of the tar inside and to further fill the mould with molten metal.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

After the first firing, the tar inside the mould melts, and flows out. It is collected in a container for further use.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Process (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

The women from the community do not participate in the making of dhokra items, as it is very labour extensive.

Few women observe the process of moulding and casting.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Products (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Dhokra Craft in Pundi Village

Most families involved into dhokra craft belong to the Malhar or Malhore community. They live in certain districts like Ramgarh, Dumka and Khunti, near Ranchi or Hazaribagh so that while they live in among their community and do make small dhokra products for them, they have close access to marketing outlets in cities where they provide more elaborate and expensive artefacts for urban and foreign markets.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Products (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Pundi village in Ramgarh district, near Ranchi is a settlement of just few mud houses situated next to highway which connects it to Ranchi city approximately 40 kms away. Pundi village is surrounded by forests on one side and a coal mine on the other.

The metal smiths of the village make a variety of decorative and utilitarian products.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Products (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

A small pendant of Hanuman done in dhokra craft has a simple form that can be worn simply with a black thread by every devotee, male or female.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Products (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

A lizard in the unique dhokra style reflects the kind of natural life common to their environment

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Products (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

An idol of goddess Durga in dhokra, depicting a scene where she is killing Mahishasur, the demon, is a popular subject for the artisans.

Dhokra Craft in Jharkhand: Products (2019)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Read more about Dhokra craft here:
-Process 
-Products

The Markets
Credits: Story

Text: Jaya Jaitly
Photography: Chirodeep Chaudhuri
Artisans: Madhav Malhar, Moti Malhar, Dilip Malhar
Ground Facilitator: Ankit Kumar
Documentary Video: Chirodeep Chaudhuri
Curation: Ruchira Verma

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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