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Art attack
Updated On: 07 June, 2015 06:12 AM IST | | Anju Maskeri
<p>After holding art get-togethers at the Sanjay Gandhi National Park, Bandra festival and Dr Bhau Daji Lad museum, the Bombay Pencil Jammers are all set to collaborate with a group of professional dancers to learn body movement and express it on paper. Anju Maskeri finds out how the group ‘draws’ inspiration</p>

ART wasn't supposed to look nice; it was supposed to make you feel something,” writes Rainbow Rowell in her 2013 novel Eleanor & Park. Abhishek Panchal's idea behind setting up the Bombay Pencil Jammers (BPJ) in 2014 was to provide a platform where people could express that 'something' on paper. “Also, there are many individuals who are immensely talented but do not have the necessary knowledge on how to put their work out to the world. I wanted to connect to such people,” says Panchal, who has been associated with the British Council for past two years as a consultant and a facilitator for The Big Draw international art festival, which aims to make art accessible to all.

An artwork by jammer Rachel Santos
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