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Bharata
Natyam
Bharatanatyam is the most popular
of Indian dances and belongs to the South Indian state of Tamilnadu. Its antiquity is well
established. In the past it was practised ad performed in the temples by a class of
dancers known as the devadasis. It was a part of the religious rituals and has a long and
hoary past. The kings and the princely courts patronised the temples, as well as the
various traditions sustaining the dance form.
The salient features of
Bharatanatyam are movements conceived in space mostly either along straight lines or
triangles. In terms of geometrical designs, the dancer appears to weave a series of
triangles besides several geometrical patterns.
In nritta (pure
dance) to the chosen time cycle and a raga (melody), a dancer executes patterns that
reveal the architectonic beauty of the form with a series of dance units called jathis or
teermanams. The torso is used as a unit, the legs are in a semi-plie form and the stance
achieves the basic posture called araimandi. The nritta numbers include Alarippu,
Jatiswaram and Tillana, which are abstract items not conveying and specific meaning except
that of joyous abandon with the dancer creating variegated forms of staggering visual
beauty.
In nritya, a dancer
performs to a poem, creating a parallel kinetic poetry in movement, registering subtle
expressions on the face and the entire body reacts to the emotions, evoking sentiments in
the spectator for relish - the rasa. The numbers are varnam, which has expressions as well
as pure dance; padams, javalis and shlokas. The accompanying music is classical Carnatic.
The themes are from Indian mythology, the epics and the Puranas.
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