Bharatanatyam (Tamil: பரதநாட்டியம்) is a classical Indian
dance form originating in Tamil Nadu
, India. One of the oldest of the classical
dance forms in India, it is also known as the fifth Veda.
Bharatanatyam is usually accompanied by the classical music. It has
its inspirations from the sculptures of the ancient temple of
Chidambaram. Bharatanatyam, as the name depicts is the combination
of:
BHA- Bhava (Expression), RA- Raga (Music) and TA- Tala
(Rhythm)Bharatanatyam is a traditional dance-form known for its
grace, purity, tenderness, and sculpturesque poses. Today, it is
one of the most popular and widely performed dance styles and is
practiced by many dancers all over the world.
Traditional roots
Surviving texts of the golden age of
Tamil literature and poetry known during
the
Sangam Age such as the
Tolkappiyam (தொல்கப்பியம்), as well as the later
Silappadikaram (சிலப்பதிகரம்),
testify to a variety of dance traditions which flourished in these
times. The latter work is of particular importance, since one of
its main characters, the courtesan Madhavi, is a highly
accomplished dancer. The
Silappadikaram is a mine of information of
ancient Tamil culture and society, in which the arts of music and
dance were highly developed and played a major role.
In ancient times it was performed as
dasiattam by
mandir (Hindu
temple)
Devadasis. Many of the ancient
sculptures in Hindu temples are based on Bharata Natyam dance
postures
karanas. In fact, it is the
celestial dancers,
apsara's, who are depicted
in many scriptures dancing the heavenly version of what is known on
earth as Bharatanatyam. In the most essential sense, a Hindu deity
is a revered royal guest in his temple/abode, to be offered the
"sixteen hospitalities" - among which are music and dance, pleasing
to the senses. Thus, many Hindu temples traditionally maintained
complements of trained musicians and dancers, as did Indian
rulers.
In
Kali Yuga, the center of most arts in
India is
Bhakti (devotion) and therefore, Bharata Natyam
as a dance form and carnatic music set to it are deeply grounded in
Bhakti. Bharata Natyam, it is said, is the embodiment of music in
visual form, a ceremony, and an act of devotion. Dance and music
are inseparable forms; only with
Sangeetam (words or
syllables set to raga or melody) can dance be conceptualized.
Bharata Natyam has three distinct elements to it:
Nritta
(rhythmic dance movements),
Natya (mime, or dance with a
dramatic aspect), and
Nritya (combination of Nritta and
Natya).
The Tamil country especially Tanjore, has always been the seat and
centre of learning and culture. It was the famous quartet of
Chinnayya, Ponniah, Sivanandam and Vadivelu of the Tanjore Court
during the Marathi King Saraboji’s time (1798- 1824) which made a
rich contribution to music and Bharatanatyam and also completed the
process of re-editing the Bharathanatyam programme into its present
shape with its various forms like the Alarippu, Jathiswaram,
Sabdham, Varnam, Tillana etc. The descendants of these four
brothers formed the original stock of Nattuvanars or dance teachers
of Bharatanatyam in Tanjore. Originally, they formed a community by
themselves and most of them were Saivite non-brahmins.
It is believed that Bharatanatyam is mainly a renewal of Cathir,
the ancient art of temple dancers.This dance form denotes various
19th and 20th century reconstructions of
Cathir, the art
of temple dancers from ancient dance forms.
Essential ideas
Bharatanatyam is considered to be a
fire-dance — the mystic manifestation of the
metaphysical element of fire in the human body. It is one of the
five major styles (one for each element) that include
Odissi (element of water), and
Mohiniattam (element of air). The movements of
an authentic Bharatanatyam dancer resemble the movements of a
dancing flame. Contemporary Bharatanatyam is rarely practiced as
Natya Yoga, a sacred meditational
tradition, except by a few orthodox schools (see
Yoga and
Dance).
Bharatanatyam proper is a
solo dance,
with two aspects,
lasya, the graceful feminine
lines and movements, and
tandava Ananda
Thandavam (Tamil) (the dance of
Shiva),
masculine aspect, which is identical to the
Yin and Yang in the Chinese culture.
Spiritual symbolism
Bharatanatyam is the manifestation of the ancient idea of the
celebration of the eternal universe through the celebration of the
beauty of the material body. Some Bharatanatyam techniques can be
traced back to the Kaisiki style. The Natya(I.44) reads, "... I
have seen the Kaisiki style during the dance of the blue-throated
lord (Shiva). It consists of elaborate gestures (
Mridu Angaharas, movements of limbs),
sentiments (
Rasas), emotional states (
Bhavas). Actions (
Kriyas) are its
soul. The costume should be charmingly beautiful and love (
Sringara) is its foundation. It cannot be
adequately portrayed by men. Except for women, none can practise it
properly".
Apart from the Kaisiki style, Bharatanatyam imbibed some others.
These
reflect other yogis spiritual revelations, such as the vision of
two sages, Vyagrapada and Pathanjali in
Chidambaram
. In
Hindu
mythology the whole universe is the dance of the Supreme
Dancer,
Nataraja, a name for Lord
Shiva, the Hindu ascetic yogi and divine purveyor of
destruction of evil. The symbolism of the dance of Shiva (in the
form of Nataraja) is represented by the attitude called "Ananda
Tandavam". Also known as the cosmic dancer, he is here the
embodiment and manifestation of the eternal energy in five
activities (
panca-kriya): creation, pouring forth,
unfolding; maintenance or duration (
sthiti); destruction
or taking back (
smhara); concealing, veiling, hiding the
transcendental essence behind the garb of apparations
(
tirobhava); and favoring, bestowing grace through a
manifestation that accepts the devotee (
anugraha). Shiva
is depicted dancing on the dwarfish body of the demon
Apasmara
purusa, "forgetfulness, loss of memory" called in Tamil
Muyalaka (முயலக) -- who represents ignorance, the
destruction of which brings enlightenment, true wisdom, and release
from the bondage of existences.
Medieval decline

200 px
Local kings often invited temple dancers (
devadasi) to dance in their courts, the occurrence
of which created a new category of dancers --
rajanarthakis -- and modified the technique and
themes of the recitals. A devadasi had to satisfy her own soul
while she danced unwatched and offered herself (surrendered) to the
Lord, but the rajanarthaki's dance was meant to be an
entertainment.
The Natya
Shastra-based margi
elements,
such as karanas, that were meant to spiritually enlighten the
spectators, were gradually replaced by desi
karanas which were later replaced by adavus. The Bharatanatyam recitals and ballets
started more and more popularly viewed as a form of
desi entertainment.
The
quartet of Chinnayya, Ponniah, Sivanandam and Vadivelu of the
Tanjore
Court,
during the rule of Maratha King Saraboji II
(1798- 1832), made a rich contribution to music and Bharatanatyam
and also completed the process of re-editing the Bharathanatyam
programme into its present shape with its various items. The
descendants of these four brothers formed the original stock of
Nattuvanars or dance teachers of Bharatanatyam in Tanjore.
Originally, they formed a community by themselves and most of them
were Shaivite non-brahmins. The fall of the Hindu kingdoms in the
South marked the eventual decline of Natya, as the Muslum invasion
in the North has completely wiped out Natya there. The sacred
dance, one of the constituents of the Sodasa Upacharam, was
replaced by rice offerings.
Modern rebirth

Bharatanatyam ballet
E.Krishna Iyer was one of those who raised the social status of
Bharatanatyam and greatly popularized it.
Rukmini Devi Arundale was instrumental
in bringing it to the attention of the West.
Having studied the
Pandanallur style for three years,
in 1936 Rukmini Devi Arundale
founded the Kalakshetra
school outside the city of Madras
to teach her
own, Kalakshetra
, style of Bharatanatyam, and to promote other
studies in Indian music and art. She
was one of first teachers to instruct a few men to perform the
dance. She introduced group performances and staged various
Bharatanatyam-based ballets.
According to Shri Sankara Menon, Rukmini Devi raised Bharatanatyam
to a
puritan art form, divorced from its
recently controversial past by "removing objectionable elements"
(mostly, the
Sringara, certain
emotional elements evocative of the erotic, such as hip, neck, lip
and chest movements) from the Pandanallur style, which was publicly
criticized by
Balasaraswati and other
representatives of the traditional
devadasi
culture. Not all love was portrayed, at least outside parameters
considered "chaste".
Balasaraswati
said that "the effort to purify Bharatanatyam through the
introduction of novel ideas is like putting a gloss on burnished
gold or painting the lotus". E .Krishna Iyer said about Rukmini
Devi, “There is no need to say that before she entered the field,
the art was dead and gone or that it saw a renaissance only when
she started to dance or that she created anything new that was not
there before”.
While the Pandanallur style, Tanjore or Thanjavur
, Vazhuvoor, Mysore
, Kancheepuram
were based on the art of rajadasis and are exoteric in nature, some others, like the Melattur style and Balasaraswati's style grew out of the
devadasis' distinctly different esoteric
art.
The development of the Bharatnatyam dance form has therefore been
surrounded by controversy as some including Ashish Khokar the
Indian dance historian have seen it as a means by which many women,
often Brahmin women, have appropriated certain
Devadasi traditions while disassociating themselves
with other aspects of the contemporary devadasis'
practices.
[8936]. The dance, at that time, was exclusively
performed by women, while men, called
Nattuvanars, had
only been teaching Bharatanatyam without actually performing it. It
is worth noticing that most of the contemporary Bharatanatyam
dancers do not satisfy the criteria for a professional danseuse
stated in the scriptures.
At present, Bharatanatyam recitals are usually not performed inside
the temple shrine but outside it, and even outside the temple
compounds at various festivals. Most contemporary performances are
given on the stage with a live ensemble. In popular culture, the
adapted, or "semi-classical", Bharatanatyam has been exposed
largely through depiction in popular movies and TV programs.
Learning Bharatanatyam normally takes many years before the
arangetram (debut). There are academic
and commercialized dance institutes in many countries. Many people
choose to learn
Carnatic music along
with Bharatanatyam as they go together.
Technique
Includes
- Abhinaya or Natya - dramatic
art of story-telling in Bharatanatyam
- Nritta - pure dance movements, as a medium of
visual depiction of rhythms
- Nritya combination of
abhinaya and nritta
In the
margi
form nritta is composed of
karanas, while the desi
nritta consists mainly of adavus.
Karanas
Karana are the 108 key transitional
movements that punctuate Bharatanatyam and other classical Indian
dances. Most of these 108
Karana have a
central, static pose as a base, i.e. the dancer is usually supposed
to stop and maintain it for a very brief duration (0.5 sec). Read
more about
Karana.
Hastas
A distinctive feature of Bharata Natyam Dance is the use of
expressive hand gestures as a way of communication. Hastas refers
to the varieties of hand symbols that a dancer can use. Many of
these hand gestures are well known. For example, Anjali is often
used as a salutation when a person greets another person. The Tamil
text
Koothanool contains descriptions of
over 300 hastas and mudras.
There are two types of Hastas : Asamyukta and Samyukta (single and
combined, respectively).
Abhinayadarpanam describes 28 Asamyukta
Hastas(Pataka, Tripataka, Ardhapataka, Karktarimukha, Mayuryakyo,
Ardhachandrashya, Arala, Shukatundako, Mhushtishya,
Shikharakhachya,Khapitya, Khatakamukhyo, Suchi, Chandrakala,
Padmakosha, Sarpashiras,etc) and 24 Samyukta Hastas and their usage
viniyoga, although Natya Shastra mentions
many more, and the usages stated in
Abhinavabharati differ considerably from
those of Abhinayadarpanam, which is a relatively recent text.
The gestures used in nritta are called nritta hastas, and are
described in detail as part of karanas in Natya Shastra. Few
Bharatanatyam schools use the full range of these. Many hastas can
be used in more than one way, depending on the song accompanying
the dance, and what the dancer is trying to convey to the
audience.
Adavus
Series of steps,
adavus, are a relatively
recent
desi component in Bharatanatyam. The
dance steps were first categorized into adavus by
Tanjore Quartet. The execution of adavus
varies greatly from style to style. Most schools recognize 108
principal adavus, while some styles include over 150 adavus. Few
professional dancers use more than 60. A combination of adavus is
called jathis, which make up the Nritta passages in a Bharatanatyam
performance.
Unlike the margi
Nritta
composed of the Karanas, the adavus do not
convey any rasa.
Bhedas and eye movements
Bharatanatyam technique includes many other elements, such as
elaborate neck and eye movements.While Natya Shastra contains the
largest number of the movements, and the most detailed
descriptions, Abhinaya Darpanam, for instance, has defined only 9
head movements, 4 neck movement and 8 eye movements (compared with
36 of Natya Shastra) which are used extensively throughout the
dance.
Head Movements (Shiro bhedas):Sama, Udhvahita, Adhomukha,
Alolita,Dhutam, Kampitam, Paravruttam, Utkshiptam and
Parivahitam.
Neck Movements (Griva bhedas):Sundari, Tirashchina, Parivartita,
Prakampita
Eye Movements (Drishti bhedas):Sama, Alolita, Sachi, Pralokita,
Nimilite, Ullokita, Anuvritta, Avalokita [who looks down]
Items
Typically a performance includes:
- Alarippu - A
presentation of the Tala punctuated by simple syllables spoken by
the dancer. This really is sort of an invocation to the gods to bless the
performance.
- Kautuvam - Ancient
temple dance item performed in the beginning of the recital,
containing rhythmic syllables sung for jathis.
- Ganapati Vandana - A traditional opening
prayer to the Hindu god Ganesh, who removes
obstacles. See also Pushpanjali
- Jatiswaram - An abstract dance where the
drums set the beat. Here the dancer displays
her versatility in elaborate footwork and graceful movements of the
body.
- Shabdam - The dancing is accompanied by a
poem or song with a devotional or amorous theme.
- Varnam - The center piece of the performance. It is the longest section of the
dance punctuated with the most complex and difficult movements.
Positions of the hands and body tell a story, usually of love and the longing for the lover.
- Padam - Probably the most lyrical section
where the dancer "speaks" of some aspect of love: devotion to the
Supreme Being; or of love of mother
for child; or the love of lovers separated and reunited.
- Stuti - Hymn in praise of
a deity that may contain a feigned mockery, etc. See also Stotra
- Koothu - Item containing
a lot of dramatic elements.
- Javali - Javalis are relatively new, pure
abhinaya types of compositions of light and pleasing nature. Like
Padams the underlying theme of Javalis is Sringara Rasa depicting
the Nayaka-Nayaki bhava.
- Thillana - The final
section is a pure dance (nritta) when the virtuosity of the music
is reflected in the complex footwork and captivating poses of the
dancer.
Apart from these items, there are items such as
Shlokam,
Swarajathi,
Krithi etc. The performance concludes with
the chanting of a few religious verses as a form of
benediction. Certain styles include more
advanced items, such as
Tharanga
Nritham and
Suddha Nritham. When
a dancer has mastered all the elements of dance, as a coming out
performance, he or she generally performs an
Arangetram(debut).
- Angikam - This is a
devotional song on Lord Shiva and an item dance in bharatnatyam. It
can also be performed in byapti slow
motion.
Other aspects

A male Bharatanatyam performer
- Jewelry - Bharatanatyam dancers wear a unique set of jewelry
known as "Temple Jewelry" during the performance.
- Costume - From the
ancient texts and sculptures, one can see that the original costume
did not cover most of the dancers' bodies. The medieval times, with
the puritanistic drive, caused the devadasis to wear a special, heavy saree that severely restricted the dance movements.
There are several varieties of Bharatanatyam costumes, some of which
do not restrict the dancer's movements, while the others do. The
modern costumes are deeply symbolic, as their purpose is to project
the dancer's sukshma sharira
(cf.aura), in the material world.
- Music - The accompanying
music is in the Carnatic style of
South India.
- Ensemble - Mostly, South Indian instruments
are used in the ensemble. These include, the mridangam (drum), nagaswaram (long pipe horn made from a black
wood), the flute, violin
and veena (stringed instrument traditionally
associated with Saraswati, the Hindu
goddess of the arts and learning).
- Languages - Tamil, Telugu and Kannada are traditionally
used in Bharatanatyam.
Ideal qualities of dancers
A professional
Bharatanatyam dancer must
demonstrate a number of qualities. As
Sangitaratnakara puts it, the true dance is
connected to the beauty of the body, therefore any other dance is
simply a parody (VII.1246).
The
AbhinayaDarpana has a sloka that
describes Patra Prana Dasha Smrutaha - the ten essentials of the
dancer:
Javaha (Agility),
Sthirathvam (Steadiness),
Rekha (graceful lines),
Bhramari(balance in pirouettes),
Drishti (glance),
Shramaha
(hard work),
Medha (intelligence),
Shraddha(devotion),
Vacho
(good speech), and
Geetam (singing
ability).
A professional danseuse (patra), according to
Abhinayadarpanam (one of the two most
authoritative texts on Bharatanatyam), must possess the following
qualities. She has to be youthful, slender, beautiful, with large
eyes, with well-rounded breasts, self-confident, witty, pleasing,
well aware of when to dance and when to stop, able to follow the
flow of songs and music, and to dance to the time (thalam), with
splendid costumes, and of a happy disposition.
As Natya
Shastra states the qualities required of a female dancer narthaki
, "Women who
have beautiful limbs, are conversant with the sixty-four arts and
crafts (kala), are clever, courteous in behaviour, free from female
diseases, always bold, free from indolence, inured to hard work,
capable of practising various arts and crafts, skilled in dancing
and songs, who excel by their beauty, youthfulness, brilliance and
other qualities all other women standing by, are known as female
dancers
Classical Dances - Similarities
The following Indian classical dance forms share more common
elements with
Bharatanatyam:
- Kuchipudi - Telugu Classical
dance
- Mohiniyattam - Kerala Classical
Dance
- Odissi - Orissa Classical dance
Many other South East Asian dances have much similarities with
Bharatanatyam.
Prominent Bharathanatyam dancers
The Bharatanatyam dancers include film actresses like
Aishwarya Rai,
Bhanupriya,
Charmi,
Hema Malini,
Padmini,
Padma
Subramanyam,
Revathi,
Shobana,
Sridevi,
Vyjayanthimala
Thousands of other eminent dancers perform Bharathanatyam every
year at various cultural events at different parts of the
world.While
Natyanjali is performed by
many artists at various natya sabas(Dance Operas), the annual
classical dance
Natyanjali festival
performed at Chidambaram Nataraja temple is world famous.
References
- bharata-natya - Britannica Online
Encyclopedia
-
http://onlinebharatanatyam.com/2007/06/bharatanatyam-history/
- http://www.narthaki.com/bhnatyam/bh2l.htm
-
http://www.hindu.com/2007/08/09/stories/2007080957982200.htm
-
http://br.gojaba.com/book/465818/History-of-Tamizh-s-Dance-S-Raghuraman-Lakshmi-Ramaswamy-tr
External links