There is a very old post of mine on Crafts Muesum, (you can read it here...) Crafts Museum when it was simply that. It was laid back with plenty of open spaces and no crowds. The parking was free and plentiful. The craftspersons would stay for a month and things went that way. All that has changed and the Crafts Museum in its new avatar is buzzing. There are a lot of events being held. Several shows and exhibitions are being mounted by the Museum using pieces from its own reserve collection. It is used as a venue for the launch of books, new initiatives. There are collaborative exhibitions. The recent ones with Inda Art Fair. The recent National Handloom celebration with @weavethefutureofficial, is a case in point. Stand alone exhibitions have included a beautiful one on Indian instruments, Puppet, Masks, Tarshito’s works, collection of Uzbek textiles of David Housego and Mandeep Negi of Shades of India.
Where – Bhairon Marg. This is just at the right turn after Chidiya Ghar, next to Purana Qila towards old Gate no. 1, Pragati Maidan.
Timings – Morning 10 am to 5:30 pim. The open areas, courtyard is open till later. Café Lota of course stays open till 9 pm. Parking is ample and if you have a driver roadside works. Otherwise the parking lot near Bhairon Mandir it is. The entire road is peppered with fountains and wide green spaces, quite a delight to the eyes.
Highlight – The open courtyard and the Ayyanar temple
icons have got a coat of geru or the typical red colouring on terracotta. The staff
is courteous and helpful. For me the best part is the textile gallery which has
been opened on the second floor. It has on display some fabulous pieces made by
Shri Martand Singh for the Festival of India. The design vocabulary of borders
from Kanjeevaram, block prints from Jaipur and more is a treat to the eyes. The
display of Kantha quilts, sarees, brocades is exceptional. The other textile
gallery downstairs is also a treat to the eyes. The other galleries abound with
interesting objects.
Insider Tip – Do attend the special exhibitions mounted which are spectacular. The craftspersons called for these exhibitions are extra-ordinary. In most other places of Delhi, the craftsperson have become repeititve. One sees the same ones doing patola, ikat, Manipuri Jamdani or soof embroidery. At the Craftsmuseum I did meet some fine new individuals. A Paithani weaver, a lady doing Sujni and tailoring in West Delhi, a beautiful soof embroiderer who was willing to do job work. Lota Café has on offer very interesting fare for food. The open courtyard has several artisans displaying their work. The shop run by CCIE has a good range of products.
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