Sunday, 23 March 2025

Tribute - The Art and Legacy of Lakshmi Viswanathan: Dancing through time - Jeetendra Hirschfeld



Renowned as Nritya Kalanidhi, Lakshmi Viswanathan was a celebrated Bharatanatyam artiste, scholar, and writer. She was known for her mesmerising performances and innovative choreography for group productions. Alongside her illustrious dance career, she authored four highly acclaimed books and contributed extensively to journals, newspapers, and dance portals. Her erudite lectures, captivating demonstrations, and popular masterclasses made her a favourite among dance students worldwide. She also held the esteemed position of editor at the Kalakshetra Journal.

I knew Lakshmi for a long time, and over the decades, my relationship with her evolved - first as a rasika, and later as a collaborator and friend. She would often call me her sparring partner. We shared a deep interest in Bharatanatyam history, particularly Thanjavur, which has been the heart of South Indian music and dance for centuries. Lakshmi's familial ties to Thanjavur gave her a deep historical and personal connection, and our research frequently intersected with this rich heritage. 

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Friday, 21 March 2025

Interview - Sharmila Biswas on Manodarpan: Reflections of Life - Shveta Arora



I watched Guru Sharmila Biswas' thought-provoking 'Manodarpan: Reflections of Life' at Kamani in Delhi on 14 December and immediately wanted to talk to her about it. Sharmila Biswas is one of India's most renowned and much awarded senior Odissi exponents, responsible for some of the most lyrical, conceptually rich and intellectually stimulating Odissi productions I have watched over the years.

'Manodarpan' was no different, based on Natya Shastra shlokas and highlighting the various dramatic elements in performing arts in the context of bhava rasa. It presented how the Natya Shastra reveals the rasas that tell human stories of human experiences - anger, love, lamentation, power. The music direction was by Rajeswari Ganguly and it was performed by Sharmila Biswas, Krishnendu Saha, Koushik Das, Dipjoy Sarkar, Biswajit Mondal, Raaginni Hindocha and Saity Dey.

In this conversation, Sharmila Biswas narrated how, like many of the interesting productions toured in the last two years, this one too emerged from artistic endeavours initiated during the COVID-19 lockdown that were not intended to be for performance. She elaborated on the interpretation of rasas (eight, not nine), stagecraft and aharya, angik and vachik, and how learning and immersion are critical to the development of her productions.

Ashtarasa, not navarasa
Sharmila Biswas explained that the production used an early interpretation of the rasa in the Natya Shastra, in which shanta was not considered a rasa humans could produce.

It was actually ashtarasa, not navarasa, because the first rasa theory in the Natya Shastra talked about eight rasas, not considering shanta. They thought that shanta was total neutrality, so there was no rasa in it and it is not something that any human can show. So, it was ashtarasa. 

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Wednesday, 19 March 2025

Interview - Dr. Sandhya Purecha: I am very positive about the future - Dr. M. Surya Prasad

Bharatanatyam exponent, author, scholar, researcher, teacher and choreographer Dr. Sandhya Purecha is the founder-principal of Bharata College of Fine Arts and Culture, Mumbai, and the Chairman of Sangeet Natak Akademi, New Delhi. Among her many awards and recognitions, she has been awarded Honorary Doctorate by the illustrious Karnataka State Gangubai University of Performing Arts, Mysore, for her exemplary and dynamic contributions to the dance field. She has also won the prestigious and well deserved 'Kalidas Samman' of the Govt. of Madhya Pradesh. Dr. Purecha shares her views in an exclusive interview for Narthaki.

I would like to celebrate these distinguished moments of your career through this interview. Please share your feelings.
I am deeply gratified to acknowledge the twin illustrious recognitions. I whole heartedly thank all for their inspiring wishes.

What is the specialty of your art form?
The specialty of my art is that it is rooted in the time tested Shastra and Sampradaya - forming the links between theory and practice of Indian dance.

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Wednesday, 12 March 2025

Kalakshetra Foundation's annual tribute to its founder - Taalam: column by Leela Venkataraman



Established in 1936, Kalakshetra, in the very space it made its home finally in Thiruvanmiyur, which its founder, with a handful of enthusiasts, built almost brick by brick, a yearly festival titled Remembering Rukmini Devi intrigues this critic. Why? For the simple reason that unencumbered by present day voices advocating change, this is one institution, where not a smidgen of compromise would be acceptable even today, in what has come down the years, passed down to students as Rukmini Athai's approach to Bharatanatyam. Every aspect of Kalakshetra still resonates with strong vibes of the founder's image. So where is the question of remembering her? Birthday Homage to Rukmini Devi, would be a more understandable title for the three-day event, marking her birthday.

The number of repeat performances over the years of her dance drama productions, particularly the half a dozen episodes built round the Valmiki Ramayana text, between the late 1950s to 1970, would be legion. 

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Friday, 7 March 2025

7th Barnali Festival - Ratikant Mohapatra Calling



The 7th edition of the two-day Barnali Festival, organized by Rudrakshya Foundation, concluded with grandeur at Utkal Rangamanch in Bhubaneswar, leaving an enduring impression on the audience. Celebrating the artistic vision of Guru Bichitrananda Swain and the excellence of his institution, the festival brought together a distinguished gathering, with eminent Odissi vocalist and musicologist Guru Ramahari Das and Rudrakshya Foundation president Ramprasad Akkisetti as honoured guests.

This year's festival was dedicated to the memory of Christopher Charles Benninger, a renowned architect and a devoted supporter of Rudrakshya Foundation, whose unwavering encouragement played a significant role in shaping the institution's journey.

The evening unfolded with three compelling dance presentations, each offering a unique artistic expression. Lipsa Satapathy captivated the audience with a solo performance, followed by a powerful duet by Samrat Dutta and Santanu Roy. The festival concluded with a dynamic group presentation by the talented repertory dancers of Rudrakshya Foundation. 

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Wednesday, 5 March 2025

We Sinful Women: Column by Janaki Patrik



I was initially inspired by the Urdu words of Pakistani feminist poets in 1993, when I read a few of their poems from the collection edited and translated by Rukhsana Ahmad and titled WE SINFUL WOMEN. Those poems had been included in the readings for Professor Gauri Viswanathan's Columbia University course, Nationalism and Modernity, in which I enrolled as part of my MA program in Indic languages and cultures.

Simultaneously, I met Naseem Khan, whose May 1976 Report to the Arts Council of Great Britain, titled "THE ARTS BRITAIN IGNORES, The Arts of Ethnic Minorities in Britain", had revealed the inherent racism and myopia of arts policy in this leading nation of the western world. Dropped like a bomb on complacency, Ms. Khan's report started a process of examination of Britain's debts to its former colonies - in this case to its citizens whose ancestral roots were in former colonies of the British Empire, and whose cultural lives in their transposed British homeland were not being supported. 

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Obit/Tribute - Himmat Shah (1933-2025) - Bharat Sharma



Another passing...

I am reminded of a half-hour dance solo I premiered in 1999, inspired by a sculpture by Himmat Shah of the hands at Shridharani Art Gallery in Mandi House in early 80s. The power of that image lingered in my impressionable mind for long. 

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