Gond artists, drawing from intimate relationships with the natural world, construct intricate patterns using core visual building blocks—dots, lines, and circles—that reflect ecological interdependence, seasonal rhythms, and local biodiversity. This study models that vocabulary as a modular visual grammar (building blocks → modules → sequences), showing how repetition, variation, and sequencing generate meaning. Through formal analysis and experimental reconstruction, the research situates Gond visual logic within systems thinking and modular design and operationalizes Gond-derived modules through a process-based methodology to generate ecologically resonant rule-based pattern studies and reconstructed module families. The study positions Gond art as a living system of visual thought with implications for contemporary design and ecological art practices. It contributes to discourses on indigenous design systems, visual semiotics, and generative aesthetics, while offering a methodological framework for culturally situated, ecologically responsive visual communication.
Anika Sarin (Fri,) studied this question.