A collaborative portrait of the fantastic masks created and worn by
Indian papier-mâché artists
Delhi-based photographer Gauri Gill's (born 1970) project Acts of
Appearance began in 2014 at a village of Adivasi papier-mâché artists
from the Kokna and Warli tribes in the Palghar district--one of the most
impoverished areas in Maharashtra, India. Gill's collaborator-subjects
are renowned for their papier-mâché objects, which include traditional
sacred masks made for the yearly Bohada procession. These masks depict
living beings with the physical characteristics of people, animals or
valued objects.
In the photographs gathered in this volume, the artists as well as other
local volunteers engage in everyday village activities while wearing
masks crafted specifically for this body of work. As a result, a
fantastic range of symbolic and playful scenarios and narratives
coalesce.