Helena Perheentupa

Last updated
Helena Perheentupa
Helena Perheentupa Textile Design.jpg
Born26 June 1929
Died6 February 2019
NationalityFinnish
EducationHämeenlinna Co-educational School, School of Art and Design
Alma mater Cranbrook Academy of Art
OccupationTextile Designer, Educator
Employer Finlayson Forssa Factory
Organization National Institute of Design
Known forTextile Design and Development
MovementModernism

Helena Perheentupa was a Finnish Designer, who spent a major part of her time establishing the Textile Design Department at the National Institute of Design. Perheentupa arrived in Ahmedabad, India in August 1968 and returned to Finland in 1992. [1]

Contents

Early life and education

Perheentupa was born in Loimaa Finland. She studied at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in the United States, majoring in the fibre arts under the guidance of Marianne Strengell, and graduated in 1960. [2] [3] During her time in India, Perheentupa collected handicrafts, that she showed to the Finnish public during numerous public exhibitions. [1]

Career

Marimekko

Before moving to India, Perheentupa was a part of the in-house design team at Marimekko. [4]

Establishing the Textile Department at NID

On the advice of her friend Nelly Sethna, Helena agreed to come to India. In a telegram message, Sethna wrote, “Will you come to India? There are camels on the streets and women carrying so many pots on their heads!” [5] Perheentupa arrived in Ahmedabad in August 1968 to established the Textile Design Department at NID. Perheentupa was the first to institutionalise a Textile Design Programme in India. Her  primary responsibility was setting up and managing the training programme. She selected students who would be taught textile design and simultaneously trained to become future teachers in the field. [5]

During her tenure at NID, many Indian crafts were documented under her guidance. Helena also headed a range of craft projects including 'Design studio for Ashoka & Raipur mills, Ahmedabad' and 'Toran: textiles from Western India'. For a while, Perheentupa also headed NID's Design Cell at Delhi and at Bangalore.

Jawaja Project

Ravi Matthai (on the chair) and Raaj Sah (with beard and long hair) with villagers in Jawaja, 1975 Ravi Matthai (on the chair) and Raaj Sah (with beard and long hair) with villagers in Jawaja, 1975.jpg
Ravi Matthai (on the chair) and Raaj Sah (with beard and long hair) with villagers in Jawaja, 1975

Along with Ravi J Matthai, Nilam Iyer, and Ravi Kaur, Perheentupa was instrumental in setting up the Jawaja experiment in 1975, to empower leather workers and weavers in the impoverished regions of the Jawaja block in, Rajasthan. [6]

Published works

Related Research Articles

Sari Womans draped garment of Indian Subcontinent

A sari or saree is a women's garment from the Indian subcontinent, that consists of an un-stitched stretch of woven fabric arranged over the body as a robe, with one end tied to the waist, while the other end rests over one shoulder as a stole (shawl), baring a part of the midriff. It may vary from 4.5 to 9 yards in length, and 600 to 1,200 millimetres in breadth, and is form of ethnic wear in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka & Nepal. There are various names and styles of sari manufacture and draping, the most common being the Nivi style. The sari is worn with a fitted bodice commonly called a choli and a petticoat called ghagra, parkar, or ul-pavadai. It remains fashionable in the Indian Subcontinent today.

Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad Business school in India

Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad is a business school located in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India. The school has been accorded the status of an Institute of National Importance by Ministry of Human Resources, Government of India in 2017. Established in 1961, the institute offers master's degree programs in management and agri-business management, a fellowship program and a number of executive training programs. The institute's founding director is Ravi J. Matthai. Other notable founding figures were the Indian physicist Vikram Sarabhai, Indian businessman Kasturbhai Lalbhai and Indian educator Kamla Chowdhary.

Tangail District District in Dhaka Division, Bangladesh

Tangail formerly a small Mohokuma of Greater Mymensingh district is a district (zila) in the central region of Bangladesh. In 1969, Tangail district was created by Tangail Mohokuma from its 237 square kilometers of its land and 3177 square kilometers of land from Mymensingh district. It is the largest district of Dhaka division by area and second largest by population. The population of Tangail zila is about 3.8 million and its area is 3,414.28 square kilometres (1,318.26 sq mi). The main city of the district is Tangail. It is surrounded by Jamalpur District on the north, the Dhaka and Manikganj Districts on the south, the Mymensingh and Gazipur on the east, and the Sirajganj on the west.

Shantipur City in West Bengal, India

Santipur is a city and a municipality in the Ranaghat subdivision of Nadia district in the Indian state of West Bengal. The fort area of this city, also known as Daak-Garh is thought to have been built by Raja Krishnachandra of Nadia.

The Sarabhai family is a prominent Indian Sindhi family active in several fields. The patriarch, Ambalal Sarabhai, was a leading industrialist. While he created significant wealth, his children interested themselves in a wide variety of other endeavours, and the family is better known for those activities, rather than for industrial enterprise, which is now all but defunct.

Silk in the Indian subcontinent Overview about silk in the India subcontinent

Silk In India, about 97% of the raw mulberry silk is produced in the Indian states of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal. Mysore and North Bangalore, the upcoming site of a US$20 million "Silk City", contribute to a majority of silk production. Another emerging silk producer is Tamil Nadu where mulberry cultivation is concentrated in Salem, Erode and Dharmapuri districts. Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh and Gobichettipalayam, Tamil Nadu were the first locations to have automated silk reeling units.

Institute of Rural Management Anand

Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA) is an autonomous institution and premier business school located in Anand Gujarat, India with the mandate of contributing to the professional management of rural organizations. IRMA was founded with the belief, borne out by Verghese Kurien’s work in the dairy co-operatives which revolutionized the dairy industry in the country, that the key to effective rural development is professional management. It is considered as the best business school in the Rural and Agricultural Business Management Sector of India.

Ravi J. Matthai

Ravi John Matthai (1927–1984) was an educationist and a professor and the first full-time Director of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. He is also the co-founder, along with Dr. K. Varghese, of Institute of Rural Management, Anand.

Kerala sari Sari originating from Kerala, India

Kerala sari (Set-sari) is a clothing of women in the Indian state of Kerala.

The National Institute of Design (NID) is a public design university in Paldi, Ahmedabad, with extension campuses in Gandhinagar and Bengaluru. Regarded as one of the foremost design schools in Asia as surveyed by Bloomberg Businessweek in 2009 and on Ranker, it is ranked 51-100 among the top art and design institutes in the world as of 2022 by QS. The university, along with the other NIDs across India, functions as an autonomous institute under the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade, Ministry of Commerce and Industry, Government of India. NID has been accorded an Institute of National Importance under the National Institute of Design Act, 2014.

Sujata Keshavan is an Indian graphic designer. She is a co-founder of Ray and Keshavan, a brand design firm based in India. At the forefront of brand-identity and design movement in India, Keshavan is considered a pioneer in developing South Asia's design industry.

Gajam Anjaiah Indian master handloom designer (born 1955)

Gajam Anjaiah, an Indian master handloom designer, who is widely recognised in the handloom industry for his innovations and developments of Tie and Dye handloom products along with Telia Rumal technique of weaving based on Ikat tie-dye process. He received Padma Shri from Government of India under Art category in 2013. He is known for his excellence in traditional handloom design works, such as Puttapaka Sarees in Tie and dye skill, that is the traditional art of designing on paper and then transferring it on to cloth. His dedication to the Handloom Industry has kept the Indian tradition of weaving alive, brought livelihood to the weavers and gave exclusive/unique designed handloom products to the people in India.

National Institute of Design, Assam

National Institute of Design, Assam or NID Jorhat is a design institute located in Jorhat, Assam. The foundation stone of the Jorhat NID was laid on February 19, 2011, by then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The fund for the institute was allocated in February 2014. The Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Suresh Prabhu inaugurated the institute at Rajabari on 22 February 2019 via video telecast. The institute offers four year courses in Textile, Apparel design, Communication design and Industrial design.

Marianne Strengell was an influential Finnish-American Modernist textile designer in the twentieth century. Strengell was a professor at Cranbrook Academy of Art from 1937 to 1942, and served as department head from 1942 to 1962. She was able to translate hand-woven patterns for mechanized production, and pioneered the use of synthetic fibers.

Kerala State Institute of Design Design school, located in Kollam, Kerala

Kerala State Institute of Design (KSID) , a design institute under Department of labour and Skills, Government of Kerala, is located at Chandanathope, about 8 Kilometers from Kollam city. It was established in 2008 with the support of NID Ahmedabad and is one of the first state-owned design institutes in India. The faculty development programme and curriculum development for the design programmes of KSID are provided by NID Ahmedabad. KSID currently conducts Post Graduate Diploma Programs in Design developed in association with National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad.

The handloom industry in Tangail is one of the oldest cottage industries of West Bengal. This traditional saree is produced in Tangail district and is named after the place.

Gira Sarabhai Indian architect and designer (1923–2021)

Gira Sarabhai was an Indian architect, designer, and a design pedagogue. She was born into the Sarabhai family and was the youngest of eight siblings. She is known for contributing to several industrial and educational projects in Gujarat. She was the representative of the Sarabhai Foundation, a public charitable trust. Gira, along with her brother Gautam Sarabhai were crucial in establishing and designing the academic curricula of National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad.

Nelly Homi Sethna was an Indian weaver, textile designer, researcher, writer and a crafts activist. She worked on the crossroads of Scandinavian modernism and Indian crafts tradition, which shaped her guiding philosophy. Her close association with Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay played an important role in the revival and promotion of traditional Indian crafts.

Monika Correa is an Indian textile artist known for her experimental weaves. She is largely a self-taught weaver which has allowed her to break free from the inhibitions of an academically trained artist and explore the possibility of textile as a medium of art.

References

  1. 1 2 "Helena Perheentupa 1926–2019". Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish). 2019-04-03. Retrieved 2021-03-31.
  2. "SUMMER RESEARCH GRANTS - Mid-Century Textiles and Global Design". THE DECORATIVE ARTS TRUST. 2020-01-15. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  3. "Helena H. Perheentupa". Cranbrook Academy of Art. 2018-12-11. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  4. Jackson, Lesley (2007-02-08). Twentieth-Century Pattern Design. Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN   978-1-56898-712-5.
  5. 1 2 "Prophets of Loom". The Indian Quarterly – A Literary & Cultural Magazine. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  6. Matthai, Ravi J.; Perheentupa, Helena; Iyer, Nilam; Kaur, Ravinder (1984). "Learning for Development at Jawaja". India International Centre Quarterly. 11 (4): 105–111. ISSN   0376-9771. JSTOR   23001709.
  7. Rana, Pallab Chandra; Perheentupa, Helena; Design, National Institute of (1992). Tangail Sarees of Bengal. National Institute of Design.
  8. Goswami, Ravi; Perheentupa, Helena; Design, National Institute of (1992). Weavers of Jawaja. National Institute of Design.
  9. "TORAN: Textiles from Western India. by Perheentupa, Helena, et al.: (1997) | John K King Used & Rare Books". www.abebooks.com. Retrieved 2021-03-20.