Core members of aravani art project | Photo: Aditi Patkar
“India is a wonderfully busy place and we have all learned to live together. But there are many people and communities who are struggling to breathe under the weight of mainstream ideas about gender,” says Viktor Baskin, an Australian anthropologist, artist and filmmaker who is also one of the five core members of the team. “Our project is very much about giving a platform to the life stories and the histories of those people and communities,” says Baskin.
The name of the project, Aravani, owes to a festival celebrated in Koovagam, in Tamil Nadu’s Viluppuram district. The festival sees thousands of transgender people come together at the Koothandavar temple dedicated to Lord Aravan. Legend has it that to ensure that the Pandavas emerged victorious against the Kauravas in the battle at Kurukshetra, Aravan, son of the Pandava prince Arjuna, offered himself as a sacrifice. His only condition was that he spend one night as a married man.
The belief is that Krishna then took the form of a woman, Mohini, to wed him. After a ritual where transgender participants are symbolically wedded to Aravan — or Koothandavar — they mourn the loss of their husbands by donning white and breaking the bangles they put on as married women.
“There were a few reservations about us calling the project ‘Aravani’,” says Priyanka Divaakar, India’s first transgender radio jockey. “We are known by so many names across cultures, but how does a label even matter? We are one, after all.”
Divaakar works with Radio Active CR 90.4MHz, an urban community radio station based in Bengaluru. As she records the histories of many of the project’s transgender collaborators, Divaakar has also taken on the role of the collective’s cultural advisor. She first joined the collective when a mural was in progress for St+Art India (a street art festival) in 2016, in Bengaluru. This mural for St+Art is a towering presence on central Bengaluru’s Dhanvantri Road. It features a portrait of a trans-person alongside hibiscus flowers.
Often ornamental, but always bold, the hibiscus is also known to have both male and female features. Almost as a reminder to the people relegated to surviving in the shadows of mainstream society, the mural is titled “Naavu Iddeve”, Kannada for “We Exist”.
Besides the bursts of colour and geometrical patterns the collective is now recognised for, their murals often include portrait-style pieces visualised by Sadhna Prasad, an illustrator who doubles as the collective’s art director.
Depending on the funding that comes in for each project, artists are also paid for their effort and time: skill-development and alternative means of livelihood are by-products of the project.
Even as the project grows, often with collaboration from corporate sponsors (they’ve worked on a mural at a Flipkart hub), and music festivals like VH1 Supersonic (“Be there, be free” reads the mural created at the festival’s recent edition in Pune), their focus remains on engaging with transgender communities to share transgender stories. Some of these are hopeful, others are nerve-racking wake-up calls.
A 60-foot-high mural in Chennai, for instance, was created in memory of Tara, a 28-year old trans-woman who was found with 90 per cent burns on her body. Tara died barely six months before the collective went to Chennai. “The project we decided to create together became a tribute to Tara and the struggles of all transgender women trying to make a life filled with love, family and friends,” says Baskin. The mural featuring Tara is called “Manidham Malarattum”, Tamil for “Let Humanity Bloom”.
“Like a lot of other trans-women, Tara was a sex worker but this did not dilute her right to live with dignity,” says Baskin, who first met the team while working on her PhD exploring the visual culture of transgender activists and artists. Baskin has since stayed on as a producer, helping with documentation, grant writing, funding and storytelling.
A lot of people think, feel Divaakar and Sonu, “that transgender people are only fit for begging or sex work or giving blessings when someone gets married or a child is born. This art project is a way to tell them that we can do anything they can.”
Bonding over meals and cups of chai, often balancing on scaffolding during projects, the Aravani team spends anywhere from three to six months working with different transgender communities to gain an understanding of their lives. “We also experiment with local colours, patterns, motifs, languages, rituals and stories, and we embrace local religions and spiritual beliefs,” says Baskin.
Art itself is therapy, feel many. As is the custom that still continues in households across South India, Sonu’s mother would draw kolams (geometrical patterns) on their doorstep every morning. Back then, Shanthi Sonu was still Shankar, a son to her parents.