Bulu Imam


Bulu Imam is an environmental activist working for the protection of tribal culture and heritage in Jharkhand. On 12 June 2012, he received the Gandhi International Peace Award, 2011 at the House of Lords in London. He is recipient of the Padma Shri. He is the grandson of Syed Hasan Imam, who was a leading Barrister and Judge of Calcutta High Court, and the President of the Indian National Congress.
Since 1987, he has been the Convenor of INTACH Hazaribagh Chapter, and in 1991, discovered the first rock art of Jharkhand at Isco, and subsequently over dozen rock art site in the North Karanpura Valley. In 1993, he brought to light the Khovar art, and then the Sohrai murals painted on the walls of the mud houses of the Hazaribagh villages. He showed the connection between the region’s rock art and the . By 1995, he established the Sanskriti Museum & Art Gallery in Hazaribagh along with have promoted the tribal art of the region, holding over 50 international exhibitions of Khovar and Sohrai paintings in Australia, Europe, and UK. He is the author of the book Bridal Caves ; , written monographs on tribes like the Birhors and the Santhals. He has made several films on tribal art and culture of Jharkhand. He is a researcher and an authority in fields related to archaeology, tribal and rock art, vernacular folklore and history.

Exhibitions

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Recent publications