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'''Odissi''' ({{lang-or|ଓଡ଼ିଶୀ}}, ]:ओडिशी) is one of the eight ] of India. It originates from the state of ], in eastern India. It is the oldest surviving dance form of India on the basis of archaeological evidences.<ref>http://www.dancesofindia.co.in/classic-dances-india/odissi.html</ref><ref>http://odissi.itgo.com/</ref> The classic treatise of Indian dance, ], refers to it as ''Odra-Magadhi''. 1st century BCE ]s in the hills of Udaygiri (near Bhubaneshwar) testify to its antiquity. It was suppressed under the British but has been reconstructed since India gained independence. | |||
{{short description|Classical dance of India}} | |||
{{Distinguish|text=the ] and ], a historical district of western Georgia}} | |||
{{Use British English|date=March 2012}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2021}} | |||
{{Infobox dance | |||
| name = Odishi | |||
| image = File:AM Odissi performance in 2010s 02.jpg | |||
| alt = | |||
| caption = Odissi | |||
| native_name = | |||
| etymology = | |||
| genre = ] | |||
| signature = | |||
| instruments = | |||
| inventor = | |||
| year = | |||
| origin = ], ] | |||
}} | |||
{{Hinduism}} | |||
'''''Odissi'''''(''''' ଓଡ଼ିଶୀ"'''')also referred to as '''''Orissi''''' in old literature, Oldest surviving classical dance of India, is a major ancient ] that originated in the ]s of ] – an eastern coastal state of ].<ref name=britannicaodis> ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' (2013)</ref>{{Sfn|Williams|2004|pp=83–84, the other major classical Indian dances are: Bharatanatyam, Kathak, Kuchipudi, Kathakali, Manipuri, Chhau, Satriya, Yaksagana and Bhagavata Mela}}<ref>{{cite web |title=Guidelines for Sangeet Natak Akademi Ratna and Akademi Puraskar|url=http://sangeetnatak.gov.in/sna/guide-snaawards.htm |access-date=6 November 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131014000750/http://sangeetnatak.gov.in/sna/guide-snaawards.htm |archive-date=14 October 2013 }}</ref> Odissi, in its history, was performed predominantly by women,<ref name=britannicaodis/><ref name="Claus2003p136">{{cite book|author1=Peter J. Claus|author2=Sarah Diamond|author3=Margaret Ann Mills|title=South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ienxrTPHzzwC |year=2003|publisher=Routledge |isbn= 978-0-415-93919-5 |pages=136 }}</ref> and expressed ] stories and spiritual ideas, particularly of ] through songs written and composed according to the ''ragas'' & ''talas'' of ] by ancient poets of the state. Odissi performances have also expressed ideas of other traditions such as those related to Hindu deities ] and ], as well as Hindu goddesses (]).<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p41">{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=4–6, 41 }}, '''Quote:''' "There are other temples too in Odisha where the ''maharis'' used to dance. Besides the temple of Lord Jagannatha, ''maharis'' were employed in temples dedicated to Shiva and Shakti."</ref> | |||
It is particularly distinguished from other classical Indian dance forms by the importance it places upon the '']'' (literally: three parts break), the independent movement of head, chest and pelvis,<ref></ref><ref name="hi">{{cite book|last=Sehgal|first=Sunil |title=Encyclopaedia of Hinduism: (H - Q).|url=http://books.google.co.in/books?id=wNQ82_yYeK8C&pg=PA868&dq=Tribhanga&ct=result#v=onepage&q=Tribhanga&f=false|year=1999|publisher=Sarup & Sons|isbn=8176250643|page=868}}</ref> and upon the basic square stance known as ''chauka''. | |||
The theoretical foundations of Odissi trace to the ancient Sanskrit text '']'', its existence in antiquity evidenced by the dance poses in the sculptures of ],<ref name="britannicaodis" /><ref name="Lochtefeld2002p483">{{cite book|author=James G. Lochtefeld|title=The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: N-Z|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=g6FsB3psOTIC |year=2002| publisher=The Rosen Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-8239-3180-4 |pages=484–485 }}</ref> and archeological sites related to ], ] and ].<ref name="Schechner65">{{cite book|author=Richard Schechner |title=Between Theater and Anthropology |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DoEaulAxbu8C&pg=PA65 |year=2010|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=978-0-8122-0092-8 |pages=65–66}}</ref><ref name="kyriakidis155" /><ref name="KothariPasricha1990p12">{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=9–10, 12}}, '''Quote:''' The art of dance and maasic suffered on account of political instability, the Muslim invasion, the desecration of the temples and the loss of independence, the lack of patronage to both the ''maharis'' and the ''gotipua'' dancers..."</ref> It was suppressed under the ].{{Sfn|Ragini Devi|1990|pp=47–49}}<ref name="Carter2013p145">{{cite book|author=Alexandra Carter|title=Rethinking Dance History: A Reader|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jYaMAQAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-48500-8|pages=144–145 }}</ref> The suppression was protested by the Indians, followed by its revival, reconstruction and expansion since ] gained independence from the colonial rule.<ref name="kyriakidis155">{{cite book|author=Evangelos Kyriakidis|title=The archaeology of ritual|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=e34KAQAAMAAJ|year=2007|publisher=Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California Press|isbn=978-1-931745-48-2|pages=155–158}}</ref> | |||
==Origin and history== | |||
], included Odissi.]] | |||
The first clear picture of Odissi dance is found in the Manchapuri cave in ] which was carved at the time of king ]. Flanked by two queens, Kharavel was watching a dance recital where a damsel was performing dance in front of the court with the company of female instrumentalists. Thus Odissi can be traced back to its origin as secular dance. Later it got attached with the temple culture of Odisha. Starting with the rituals of ] in ] it was regularly performed in ], ] and ] temple in Odisha. An inscription is found where it was engraved that a ] Karpursri’s attachment to ], where she was performing along with her mother and grandmother. It proves that Odissi first originated as a court dance. Later it was performed in all religious places of ] as well as ] monasteries. Odissi was initially performed in the temples as a religious offering by the Maharis who dedicated their lives in the services of God. It has the closest resemblance with sculptures of the Indian temples.<ref name="nadanam.com"></ref> | |||
Odissi is traditionally a dance-drama genre of ], where the artist(s) and musicians play out a story, a spiritual message or devotional poem from the ], using symbolic costumes,<ref>{{cite book|author=Stephanie Arnold|title=The Creative Spirit: An Introduction to Theatre|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pn1zCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA9 |year=2014|publisher=McGraw Hill |isbn=978-0-07-777389-2 |pages=9 }}</ref> body movement, '']'' (expressions) and '']s'' (gestures and ]) set out in ancient Sanskrit literature.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=1–4, 76–77}}</ref> Classical Odia literature & the ] set to traditional ] are used for the ''abhinaya''. Odissi is learnt and performed as a composite of basic dance motif called the '']'' (symmetric body bends, stance). It involves lower (footwork), mid (torso) and upper (hand and head) body as three sources of perfecting expression and audience engagement with geometric symmetry and rhythmic musical resonance.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=50}}</ref><ref name="Vatsyayan1983p57">{{cite book|author=Kapila Vatsyayan|title=The square and the circle of the Indian arts|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2sKfAAAAMAAJ|year=1983|publisher=Roli Books International|pages=57–58}}</ref> An Odissi performance repertoire includes invocation, ''nritta'' (pure dance), ''nritya'' (expressive dance), ''natya'' (dance drama) and ''moksha'' (dance climax connoting salvation of the ] and spiritual release).<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/><ref name=aroyo267/> | |||
The history of Odissi dance has been traced to an early sculpture found in the Ranigumpha caves at Udaygiri (Odisha), dating to the 2nd century BC. Odissi appears to be the oldest classical dance rooted in rituals and tradition. In fact, the ] refers to Odra Magadhi as one of the vrittis and Odra refers to Odisha.<ref>http://www.nadanam.com/odissi/o_history.htm</ref> | |||
Traditional Odissi exists in two major styles, the first perfected by women and focussed on solemn, ]; the second perfected by ]<ref>{{cite book|author1=Axel Michaels|author2=Christoph Wulf|title=Images of the Body in India: South Asian and European Perspectives on Rituals and Performativity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ui2pAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT192 |year=2012|publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-70392-8|page=192}}</ref> which diversified to include athletic and acrobatic moves, and were performed from festive occasions in temples to general folksy entertainment.<ref name="Lochtefeld2002p483"/> Modern Odissi productions by Indian artists have presented a diverse range of experimental ideas, culture fusion, themes and plays.<ref>{{cite book|author=Ian Watson|title=Towards a Third Theatre: Eugenio Barba and the Odin Teatret|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ChGGAgAAQBAJ |year=2003|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-79755-4 |pages=xii–xiii }}</ref> | |||
===Temple history=== | |||
In ], the capital city of Odisha, there are the ], ] caves, which date back to the 2nd century BC that served as a royal palace for King Kharavela. It is suggested by scholars that Odissi is the archeologically oldest Indian classical dance form due to sculptural evidence found in the caves. There are several sculptures of dancers and musicians are in ] and Brahmesvar temple in Bhubaneswar.<ref>http://www.jagannatha.net/dance.html</ref> | |||
Odissi was the only Indian dance form present in ]'s 1991 hit single "]". | |||
In the excavated ruins of the Buddhist ] hills in Odisha dating back to the 6th-9th centuries, several panels and icons of dance are found resembling present-day Odissi dance. | |||
==History of Odissi== | |||
In the ] temples, such as the Hirapur Shrine, many of the ]s especially are depicted in poses reminiscent of present day Odissi. When Odisha became a big centre of worship of ], it is only natural that dance would be used as a form of worship, since Lord Shiva was a master dancer himself. He is the Nataraj, the Cosmic Lord of Dance. The Shaivite temples of Bhubaneswar display innumerable sculptures in postures of Odissi. The Vaishnavite Temples such as ] temple and ] sun temple abound with an array of dancing sculptures carved into the temple walls, giving testimony that a particular school of dancing had continued from the Shaivite art tradition to the Vaishnovite art form. | |||
The foundations of Odissi are found in '']'', the ancient Hindu Sanskrit text of performance arts.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p32">{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=32–33, 48–49, 68 }}</ref><ref name="Kuiper2010p278">{{cite book|author=Kathleen Kuiper|title=The Culture of India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=c8PJFLeURhsC&pg=PA278 |year=2010|publisher=The Rosen Publishing Group|isbn=978-1-61530-149-2 |pages=278 }}</ref> The basic dance units described in the ''Natya Shastra'', all 108 of them, are identical to those in Odissi.<ref name="Kuiper2010p278"/> The text is attributed to the ancient scholar ], and its first complete compilation is dated to between 200 BCE and 200 CE,{{Sfn|Natalia Lidova|2014}}{{Sfn|Tarla Mehta|1995|pp=xxiv, 19–20}} but estimates vary between 500 BCE and 500 CE.{{Sfn|Wallace Dace|1963|p=249}} The most studied version of the Natya Shastra text consists of about 6000 verses structured into 36 chapters.{{Sfn|Natalia Lidova|2014}}{{Sfn|Emmie Te Nijenhuis|1974|pp=1–25}} The text, states Natalia Lidova, describes the theory of Tāṇḍava dance (]), the theory of rasa, of bhāva, expression, gestures, acting techniques, basic steps, standing postures – all of which are part of Indian classical dances.{{Sfn|Natalia Lidova|2014}}{{Sfn|Kapila Vatsyayan|2001}} Dance and performance arts, states this ancient text,<ref>{{cite book|author=Guy L. Beck|title=Sonic Liturgy: Ritual and Music in Hindu Tradition|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UzUMCAAAQBAJ |year=2012|publisher=University of South Carolina Press|isbn=978-1-61117-108-2|pages=138–139 |quote='''Quote:''' "A summation of the signal importance of the Natyasastra for Hindu religion and culture has been provided by Susan Schwartz, "In short, the Natyasastra is an exhaustive encyclopedic dissertation of the arts, with an emphasis on performing arts as its central feature. It is also full of invocations to deities, acknowledging the divine origins of the arts and the central role of performance arts in achieving divine goals (...)".}}</ref> are a form of expression of spiritual ideas, virtues and the essence of scriptures.<ref name="mog17">{{cite web|title=The Mirror of Gesture|author=Coormaraswamy and Duggirala|publisher=Harvard University Press|year=1917|page=4|url=https://archive.org/stream/cu31924012568535#page/n5/mode/2up}}; Also see chapter 36</ref> The ] refers to four ''pravrittis'' (methods of expressive delivery) in vogue – ''Avanti'', ''Dakshinatya'', ''Panchali'' and ''Odra-Magadhi'' ; of these, the ''Odra'' refers to Odisha.<ref name="kothari6" /> | |||
More direct historical evidence of dance and music as an ancient performance art are found in archaeological sites such as caves and in temple carvings of ], ] and ].<ref name="Kuiper2010p278" /><ref>{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=13–16, 31–32}}</ref> The Manchapuri cave in ] shows carvings of ] and musicians, and this has been dated to the time of ] king ] in the first or second century BCE. The ]s, also dated to the same ruler, mention music and dance :<ref name="kothari6">{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=5–6}}</ref><ref>Benudhar Patra (2008), , Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, Volume 89, pages 133-168</ref> | |||
===Manuscript evidence=== | |||
Sage Bharata's '']'', written in 2nd century AD, speaks of four types of Pravrittis (local usages): Avanti, Dakshinatya, Panchali, and Odra Magadhi and the areas where each type is employed. Some scholars have interpreted that Odra Magadhi is a reference to Odissi, in fact, "the earliest literary reference to Odissi”. | |||
<blockquote style="background-color:none;margin-right:5em;margin-left:0em;border-left:solid 6px #FFE0BB;padding:1.0em"> | |||
''Abhinaya Chandrika'' written by Maheshvara Mahapatra is a detailed study of the movements of the feet, hands, the standing postures, the movement and the dance repertoire. It includes illustrations of the Karanãs mentioned in ''NãtyaShãstra''. | |||
(he ) versed in the science of the ''Gandharvas'' (i.e., music), entertains the capital with the exhibition of ''dapa'', dancing, singing and instrumental music and by causing to be held festivities and assemblies (samajas)...</p> | |||
— ''Hathigumpha inscription, Line 5'', ~ 2nd–1st century BCE<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303232906/http://www.sdstate.edu/projectsouthasia/upload/HathigumphaInscription.pdf |date=3 March 2016 }} South Dakota State University, Epigraphia Indica, Vol. XX (1929–30)</ref><ref>J. F. Fleet (1910), , The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, (Jul. 1910), Cambridge University Press, pages 824–828</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
The classical music tradition of Odisha, known as ], also has ancient roots. Archeologists have reported the discovery of 20-key, carefully shaped polished basalt lithophone in ], the highlands of Odisha, which is dated to about 1000 BCE.<ref>{{Cite journal|author1=P. Yule |author2=M. Bemmann |title=Klangsteine aus Orissa-Die frühesten Musikinstrumente Indiens?|journal=Archaeologia Musicalis|volume=2|issue=1 |year=1988|pages=41–50|url=http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/savifadok/volltexte/2008/177/}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Bruno Nettl|author2=Ruth M. Stone|author3=James Porter|display-authors=etal|title=The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: South Asia : the Indian subcontinent|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ZOlNv8MAXIEC&pg=PA319 |year=1998|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-0-8240-4946-1 |pages=319 }}</ref> | |||
The illustrated manuscript ''Shilpaprakãsha'' deals with Odia architecture and sculpture as well as the figures of dance. In this, one finds a elaborate analysis of the manner in which the salabhanjikãs or the feminine figures called the alasa kanyas are carved in the temple. The illustrations of ''Shilpaprakãsha'' reinforces the evidence of sculpture in temples. | |||
===Medieval era=== | |||
A rather unexpected source, the Jain Manuscripts, especially the Kalpasutra and Kalkacharya Kathãs show traces of Odia dance style although they were being executed in ]. The marginal figures of dancers show women in poses and movements similar to the distinctive style of Odisha. For example, in one of the famous illustrated Jain Manuscripts called the Devasanpada Kalpasutra (1501, ]), there is depiction of the samapada, the tribhangi and the chuaka. | |||
] | |||
The ], ] and ] archaeological sites in Odisha state, particularly the Assia range of hills show inscriptions and carvings of dances that are dated to the 6th to 9th century CE. Important sites include the Ranigumpha in Udaygiri, and various caves and temples at Lalitgiri, Ratnagiri and Alatgiri sites. The Buddhist icons, for example, are depicted as dancing gods and goddesses, with Heruka, Vajravarahi, and Marichi in Odissi-like postures.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=13–15}}</ref><ref>DB Mishra (2006), Odisha Review</ref> Historical evidence, states Alexandra Carter, shows that Odissi ''Maharis'' (Hindu temple dancers) and dance halls architecture (''nata-mandapa'') were in vogue at least by the 9th century CE.<ref>{{cite book|author=Alexandra Carter|title=Rethinking Dance History: A Reader|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jYaMAQAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-48500-8|pages=147–148 }}</ref> | |||
According to ], the ''Kalpasutra'' of Jainism, in its manuscripts discovered in Gujarat, includes classical Indian dance poses – such as the ''Samapada'', the ''Tribhangi'' and the ''Chauka'' of Odissi. This, states Vatsyayan, suggests that Odissi was admired or at least well known in distant parts of India, far from Odisha in the medieval era, to be included in the margins of an important Jain text.<ref>{{cite book|author=Kapila Vatsyayan|title=Dance In Indian Painting|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=58fUibaZdGYC|year=1982 |publisher=Abhinav Publications|isbn=978-0391022362|pages=73–78 }}</ref> However, the Jain manuscripts use the dance poses as decorative art in the margins and cover, but do not describe or discuss the dance. Hindu dance texts such as the ''Abhinaya Chandrika'' and ''Abhinaya Darpana'' provide a detailed description of the movements of the feet, hands, the standing postures, the movement and the dance repertoire.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=66–67}}</ref> It includes illustrations of the ''karana''s mentioned in ''Natya Shastra''.{{sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=210-212}} Similarly, the illustrated Hindu text on temple architecture from Odisha, the ''Shilpa Prakasha'', deals with Odia architecture and sculpture, and includes Odissi postures.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Alice Boner|author2=Sadāśiva Rath Śarmā|title=Silpa Prakasa Medieval Odishan Sanskrit Text on Temple Architecture|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=itQUAAAAIAAJ |year=1966|publisher=Brill Academic|pages=74–80, 52, 154 }}</ref> | |||
This shows that there was a great deal of mobility between east and west and many migrations took place. According to some historians, there were groups of dancers who were brought to ] from ] and 'from ]. | |||
] | |||
Actual sculptures that have survived into the modern era and panel ]s in Odia temples, dated to be from the 10th to 14th century, show Odissi dance. This is evidenced in ] in ], as well as other temples of ], ], ] and Vedic deities such as ] (Sun) in Odisha.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p41"/> There are several sculptures of dancers and musicians in ] and ] in ].<ref name=britannicaodis/><ref name="Lochtefeld2002p483"/> | |||
The composition of the poetic texts by 8th century Shankaracharya and particularly of divine love inspired ''Gitagovinda'' by 12th century Jayadeva influenced the focus and growth of modern Odissi.<ref name="Verma2011p43">{{cite book|author=Archana Verma|title=Performance and Culture: Narrative, Image and Enactment in India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iAArBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA43 |year=2011|publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing|isbn=978-1-4438-2832-1 |pages=43–57 }}</ref> Odissi was performed in the temples by the dancers called ''Maharis'', who played out these spiritual poems and underlying religious plays, after training and perfecting their art of dance starting from an early age, and who were revered as auspicious to religious services.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p41"/><ref name="Verma2011p43"/> | |||
===Mughal and British period=== | ===Mughal and British period=== | ||
After 12th-century, Odia temples, monasteries and nearby institutions such as the ] in eastern Indian subcontinent came under waves of attacks and ransacking by Muslim armies, a turmoil that impacted all arts and eroded the freedoms previously enjoyed by performance artists.<ref name="Carter2013p145"/> The official records of Sultan Firuz Shah Tughlaq's invasion in ] (1360{{ndash}}1361 CE), for example, describe the destruction of the ] as well as numerous other temples, defacing of dancing statues, and ruining of dance halls.<ref>{{cite book|author=Dhirendranath Patnaik|title=Odissi dance|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=TBtHAQAAIAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Odisha Sangeet Natak Adademi|pages=68–69 }}</ref> This led to a broad decline in Odissi and other religious arts, but there were some benevolent rulers in this period who supported arts particularly through performances at courts.<ref name="Carter2013p145"/> During the Sultanate and Mughal era of ], the temple dancers were moved to entertain the Sultan's family and courts.<ref>{{cite book|author=Stephanie Burridge|title=Shifting sands: dance in Asia and the Pacific|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mm8NAQAAMAAJ|year=2006|publisher=Australian Dance Council|isbn=978-1-875255-15-3|page=32}}</ref> They became associated with ] to the nobility.{{citation needed|date=August 2016}} | |||
During the Mughal rule of India, the duties of the maharis, the temple dancers, shifted as they were employed to entertain the royal family and courtiers in the royal courts. They became associated with concubinage in respect to the king and ceased to be respected solely as servants to Lord Jagannath. Although the British have helped India in several ways, a decline and degradation occurred in all the Indian classical dance styles during the British period, especially when a bill was passed prohibiting temple dancing. Most of these dancers, losing their well-deserved place in society, were forced to prostitution to survive in the changing climate of political and cultural oppression of the British. | |||
] | |||
==Tradition and dancers== | |||
The Odissi dance likely expanded in the 17th century, states Alexandra Carter, under King Ramachandradeva's patronage.<ref name=carter148/> This expansion integrated martial arts (''akhanda'') and athletics into Odissi dance, by engaging boys and youth called ''Gotipuas'', as a means to physically train the young for the military and to resist foreign invasions.<ref name=carter148>{{cite book|author=Alexandra Carter|title=Rethinking Dance History: A Reader|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jYaMAQAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-48500-8|pages=148–149 }}</ref> According to Ragini Devi, historical evidence suggests that the ''Gotipuas'' tradition was known and nurtured in the 14th century, by Raja of Khordha.{{Sfn|Ragini Devi|1990|p=142}} | |||
] | |||
The Odissi tradition existed in three schools: ''Mahari, Nartaki'', and ''Gotipua''. | |||
During the ], the officials of the colonial government ridiculed the temple traditions, while Christian missionaries launched a sustained attack on the moral outrage of sensuousness of Odissi and other Hindu temple dance arts.<ref name="Carter2013p145"/><ref name=marysnodgrass166>{{cite book|author=Mary Ellen Snodgrass|title=The Encyclopedia of World Folk Dance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DMGpDAAAQBAJ |year=2016|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-1-4422-5749-8 |pages=165–168 }}</ref><ref name="Walker2016p94">{{cite book|author=Margaret E. Walker|title=India's Kathak Dance in Historical Perspective|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nC83DAAAQBAJ&pg=PA94|year=2016|publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-317-11737-7 |pages=94–98 }}</ref> In 1872, a British civil servant named William Hunter watched a performance at the Jagannatha temple in Puri, then wrote, "Indecent ceremonies disgraced the ritual, and dancing girls with rolling eyes put the modest worshipper to the blush...", and then attacked them as idol-worshipping prostitutes who expressed their devotion with "airy gyrations".<ref name="Alexandra Carter 2013 145–146">{{cite book|author=Alexandra Carter|title=Rethinking Dance History: A Reader|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jYaMAQAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-48500-8|pages=145–146 }}</ref> | |||
* '''Maharis''' were Odia ]s or temple girls (their name deriving from ''Maha'' (great) and ‘Nari’ or ‘Mahri’ (chosen) particularly those at the temple of ] at ]. Early Maharis performed mainly nritta (pure dance) and ] (interpretation of poetry) based on ]s and ]s. Later Maharis, especially, performed dance sequences based on the lyrics of ]'s '']''. ''Bhitari gauni Maharis'' were allowed in the inner temple while ''bahari gauni Maharis'', though in the temples, were excluded from the ''sanctum sanctorum.'' | |||
* By the 6th century the '''Gotipua''' tradition was emerging. One of the reasons given for the emergence of Gotipuas is that ] did not approve of dancing by women. Gotipuas were boys dressed as girls and taught the dance by the Maharis. During this period, ] poets composed innumerable lyrics in ] dedicated to ] and ]. Gotipuas danced to these compositions. The Gotipuas stepped out of the precincts of the temples. | |||
* '''Nartaki''' dance took place in the royal courts, where it was much cultivated before the British period. At that time the misuse of devadasis came under strong attack, so that Odissi dance withered in the temples and became unfashionable at court. Only the remnants of the gotipua school remained, and the reconstruction of the style required an archaeological and anthropological effort that has tended to foster a conservative purism.<ref>Alessandra Lopez y Royo, "The reinvention of odissi classical dance as a temple ritual," published in ''The Archaeology of Ritual'' ed. Evangelos Kyriakidis, Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, UCLA 2007</ref> | |||
Christian missionaries launched the "anti-dance movement" in 1892, to ban all such dance forms.<ref name=marysnodgrass166/> The dancers were frequently stigmatized as prostitutes by Europeans during the ].<ref name=amritsri73>{{cite journal|title=The Hindu Temple-dancer: Prostitute or Nun? |author= Amrit Srinivasan|journal= The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology|volume= 8| number= 1 |year =1983| pages= 73–99|jstor=23816342}}</ref><ref name=leslieorr8>{{cite book|author=Leslie C. Orr|title=Donors, Devotees, and Daughters of God: Temple Women in Medieval Tamilnadu|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F___xKcP8lMC |year=2000|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-535672-4|pages=5, 8–17}}</ref> In 1910, the British colonial government in India banned temple dancing,<ref name=pallabinilan30>{{cite book|author1=Pallabi Chakravorty|author2=Nilanjana Gupta|title=Dance Matters: Performing India on Local and Global Stages|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KQly7wn0C5sC&pg=PA30 |year=2012|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-51612-2 |pages=30 }}</ref> and the dance artists were reduced to abject poverty from the lack of any financial support for performance arts, combined with stereotyping stigma.<ref name=carter148/> | |||
===Mahari tradition=== | |||
The consecration of females to the service of temple dancing began in the Shaivite temples and continued in the Jagannath temple in service of the Lord Jagannath. These attendants have been known as maharis (great women) or devadasis (servants of the lord) and have been considered the wives of Lord Jagannath. Odissi developed through their art. | |||
===Post-independence=== | |||
The first evidence of the Mahari institution in Odisha comes from a commemorative inscription by Udyota Kesari, the last King of the dynasty. In the 10th century the King’s mother, Kolavati Devi, dedicated temple dancers to Lord Shiva in the Brahmeswar Temple. | |||
The temple dance ban and the cultural discrimination during the colonial rule marshaled a movement by Hindus to question the stereotypes and to revive the regional arts of ], including Odissi.<ref name=marysnodgrass166/><ref name="Walker2016p94"/><ref name="Alexandra Carter 2013 145–146"/> Due to these efforts, the classical Indian dances witnessed a period of renaissance and reconstruction, which gained momentum particularly after Indians gained their freedom from colonialism.<ref name=craine420>{{cite book|author1=Debra Craine|author2=Judith Mackrell|title=The Oxford Dictionary of Dance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=42g8Hp-xA48C |year=2010|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0199563449 |pages=420 }}</ref> | |||
] | |||
Raja Anantavarma Chodagangadeva appointed dancing girls for ritual services in the Jagannatha temple in the 11th century, and these Maharis were the ones responsible for keeping the dance alive for centuries. | |||
Through the technique of unequal division of weight and firm footwork balancing a fluid upper torso, the dancer achieves a sensuality that is uncommon in other classical dance styles. | |||
Odissi, along with several other major Indian dances gained recognition after efforts by many scholars and performers in the 1950s, particularly by ], an Oriya poet, dramatist and researcher. Pattanayak is also credited with naming the dance form as "Odissi".<ref name="Carter2013p145"/><ref>{{cite journal|author=David Dennen |url=https://www.academia.edu/2577115 |title=The Naming of Odissi: Changing Conceptions of Music in Odisha|journal=Ravenshaw Journal of Literary and Cultural Studies (Vol. 3) |date=January 2013 }}</ref> | |||
Some eminent Mahari dancers are Moni Mahari, Dimmi (Domi) Mahari, Dungri Mahari (Harapriya), and Padmashri Guru Pankaj Charan Das. | |||
==Repertoire== | |||
===Gotipua tradition=== | |||
] | |||
In the Odia language Gotipua means ''single boy''. Gotipua dance is performed only by boys who dress up as females. | |||
Odissi, in the classical and medieval period has been, a team dance founded on Hindu texts.<ref name="Lochtefeld2002p483"/> This drama-dance involved women (''Maharis'') enacting a spiritual poem or a religious story either in the inner sanctum of a Hindu temple, or in the ''Natamandira'' attached to the temple.{{Sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|p=209}} The Odissi performing ''Maharis'' combined pure dance with expression, to play out and communicate the underlying text through ''abhinaya'' (gestures).{{Sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|p=209}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Alexandra Carter|title=Rethinking Dance History: A Reader|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jYaMAQAAQBAJ |year=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-48500-8|pages=149 }}</ref> The performance art evolved to include another aspect, wherein teams of boys – dressed as girls – called ''Gotipuas'' expanded the Odissi repertoire, such as by adding acrobatics and athletic moves, and they performed both near the temples and open fairs for general folksy entertainment.<ref name="Lochtefeld2002p483"/><ref name=carter148/> In the Indian tradition, many of the accomplished ''gotipuas'' became the ]s (teachers) in their adulthood.<ref name=carter148/> Modern Odissi is a diversified performance art, men have joined the women, and its reconstruction since the 1950s have added new plays and aspects of other Indian dances. | |||
Love is a universal theme and one of the paradigmatic values in Indian religions. This theme is expressed through sensuous love poems and metaphors of sexual union in Krishna-related literature, and as longing eros (''Shringara'') in its dance arts such as in Odissi, from the early times.<ref name=carter148/><ref>{{cite book|author=Archana Verma|title=Performance and Culture: Narrative, Image and Enactment in India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iAArBwAAQBAJ |year=2011|publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |isbn= 978-1-4438-2832-1|pages=43–47 }}</ref> Hinduism, states Judith Hanna, encourages the artist to "strive to suggest, reveal or re-create the infinite, divine self", and art is considered as "the supreme means of realizing the Universal Being".<ref name="Hanna1988p102">{{cite book|author=Judith Lynne Hanna|title=Dance, Sex, and Gender: Signs of Identity, Dominance, Defiance, and Desire|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QGJ68sbWFVUC |year=1988|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-31551-5|pages=102–103 }}</ref> Physical intimacy is not something considered as a reason for shame, rather considered a form of celebration and worship, where the saint is the lover and the lover is the saint.<ref>{{cite book|author=Judith Lynne Hanna|title=Dance, Sex, and Gender: Signs of Identity, Dominance, Defiance, and Desire|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QGJ68sbWFVUC |year=1988|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-31551-5|pages=98–106 }}</ref> This aspect of Odissi dancing has been subdued in the modern post-colonial reconstructions, states Alexandra Carter, and the emphasis has expanded to "expressions of personal artistic excellence as ritualized spiritual articulations".<ref name=carter148/> | |||
During the rule of King Prataprudra Dev, who was a follower of Sri Chaitanya, started this boy dancing tradition again as Vasishnavs were not approving of the females in to dance practices.<ref>http://www.orissadiary.com/orissa_profile/dance/Gotipua%20Dance.asp</ref> | |||
The traditional Odissi repertoire, like all classical Indian dances, includes ''Nritta'' (pure dance, solo), ''Nritya'' (dance with emotions, solo) and ''Natya'' (dramatic dance, group).<ref name="NettlStone1998p519 ">{{cite book|author1=Bruno Nettl|author2=Ruth M. Stone|author3=James Porter|display-authors=etal|title=The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: South Asia : the Indian subcontinent|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZOlNv8MAXIEC |year=1998|publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-8240-4946-1 |pages=519–521 }}</ref>{{Sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=207-214}} These three performance aspects of Odissi are described and illustrated in the foundational Hindu texts, particularly the ''Natya Shastra'', ''Abhinaya Darpana'' and the 16th-century ''Abhinaya Chandrika'' by Maheshwara Mahapatra of Odisha.<ref name="NettlStone1998p519 "/>{{Sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=207–214}} | |||
==Dance vocabulary and repertoire== | |||
*The ''Nritta'' performance is abstract, fast and rhythmic aspect of the dance.<ref name=koskoff955/>{{Sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=207–214}} The viewer is presented with pure movement in Nritta, wherein the emphasis is the beauty in motion, form, speed, range and pattern. This part of the repertoire has no interpretative aspect, no telling of story. It is a technical performance, and aims to engage the senses (prakriti) of the audience.<ref name="Descutner2010p45">{{cite book|author=Janet Descutner|title=Asian Dance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8tCYjXOtkdgC |year=2010|publisher=Infobase|isbn=978-1-4381-3078-1|pages=45–46}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
*The ''Nritya'' is slower and expressive aspect of the dance that attempts to communicate feelings, storyline particularly with spiritual themes in Hindu dance traditions.<ref name=koskoff955>{{cite book|author=Ellen Koskoff|title=The Concise Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: The Middle East, South Asia, East Asia, Southeast Asia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=73MO0eiQD_EC&pg=PA955 |year=2008|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0-415-99404-0 |pages=955 }}</ref>{{Sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=207-214}} In a ''nritya'', the dance-acting expands to include silent expression of words through the ] of gestures and body motion set to musical notes. This part of a repertoire is more than sensory enjoyment, it aims to engage the emotions and mind of the viewer.<ref name="Descutner2010p45"/> | |||
Traditional Odissi repertoire consists of: | |||
*The ''Natyam'' is a play, typically a team performance, but can be acted out by a solo performer where the dancer uses certain standardized body movements to indicate a new character in the underlying story. A ''Natya'' incorporates the elements of a ''Nritya''.<ref name="NettlStone1998p519 "/>{{Sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=207–214}} | |||
*The ''Mokshya'' is a climatic pure dance of Odissi, aiming to highlight the liberation of soul and serenity in the spiritual.<ref name=aroyo267>{{cite book|author= Alessandra Royo| editor=Pallabi Chakravorty, Nilanjana Gupta|title=Dance Matters: Performing India on Local and Global Stages|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_QDgCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA267|year=2012|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-51613-9|page=267}}</ref> | |||
Odissi dance recitals are in Odia and Sanskrit language in the music strictly follows ragas & talas of the ] tradition.<ref name="NettlStone1998p519 "/> The talas used in Odissi dance are ''Ekatali, Khemata, Rupaka, Tripata, Jhampa, Jati Tala, Adatali, Matha, Aditala, Sarimana, Kuduka'' and others. | |||
;Mangalacharan: An invocational piece. After paying homage to Lord Jagganath a sloka (hymn) in praise of some God or Goddess is sung, the meaning of which is brought out through dance. Mangalacharan also includes the ‘bhumi pranam’, begging forgiveness of mother earth for stamping on her, and the ‘trikhandi pranam’ or threefold salutation - above the head to the Gods, in front of the face to the gurus and in front of the chest to the audience. | |||
===Sequence=== | |||
;Battu Nrutya: A dance piece offered to the Lord of dance - Lord Shiva in his ‘Batuka Bhairava’ form. This piece brings out the essence of Odissi. The interrelationship between temple sculptural art and Odissi dance is established with an array of sculpturesque poses taken directly from the innumerable dancing sculptures adorning the temples of Odisha. These poses are stringed together with steps in different rhythms. | |||
Traditional Odissi repertoire sequence starts with an invocation called '']''.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 ">{{cite book|author1=Bruno Nettl|author2=Ruth M. Stone|author3=James Porter|display-authors=etal|title=The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: South Asia : the Indian subcontinent|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZOlNv8MAXIEC |year=1998|publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-8240-4946-1 |pages=520 }}</ref> A '']'' (hymn) in praise of a god or goddess is sung, such as to Jagannath (an ] of Vishnu), the meaning of which is expressed through dance.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/> Mangalacharana is followed by ''Pushpanjali'' (offering of flowers) and ''Bhumi Pranam'' (salutation to mother earth).<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/> The invocation also includes ''Trikhandi Pranam'' or the three-fold salutation – to the devas (gods), to the gurus (teachers) and to the lokas or rasikas (fellow dancers and audience).<ref>{{cite book|author=Catherine B. Asher|title=India 2001: Reference Encyclopedia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F_BtAAAAMAAJ|year=1995|publisher=South Asia Book|isbn=978-0-945921-42-4|page=6}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
;Pallavi: A pure dance item in which a ] is elaborated through eye movements, body postures & intricate footwork. Pallavi literally means “blossoming”. This is applicable not only to the dance, but also to the music, which accompanies it. Pallavi starts with slow, graceful & lyrical movements of the eyes, neck, torso & feet & slowly builds in a crescendo to climax in a fast tempo at the end. Both the dance and the music evolve in complexity as the dancer traces multiple patterns in space, interpreting the music dexterously in the multilayered dimensions of taal (rhythm) and laya (speed). | |||
The next sequential step in an Odissi performance is ''Batu'', also known as ''Battu Nrutya'' or ''Sthayee Nrutya'' or ''Batuka Bhairava''.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/>{{Sfn|Kapila Vatsyayan|1974|pp=38–39}} It is a fast pace, pure dance (''nritta'') performed in the honor of ]. There is no song or recitation accompanying this part of the dance, just rhythmic music. This pure dance sequence in Odissi builds up to a Pallavi which is often slow, graceful & lyrical movements of the eyes, neck, torso & feet & slowly builds in a crescendo to climax in a fast tempo at the end.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/>{{Sfn|Kapila Vatsyayan|1974|pp=38–39}} | |||
The ''nritya'' follows next, and consists of ''Abhinaya'', or an expressional dance which is an enactment of a song or poetry.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/>{{Sfn|Kapila Vatsyayan|1974|pp=38–39}} The dancer(s) communicate the story in a sign language, using '']s'' (hand gestures), '']s'' (enacting mood, emotions), eye and body movement.{{Sfn|Ragini Devi|1990|pp=144–145}} The dance is fluid, graceful and sensual. Abhinaya in Odissi is performed to verses recited in ] or ].{{Sfn|Kapila Vatsyayan|1974|pp=38, 65}} Most common are Abhinayas on Oriya songs or Sanskrit ''Ashthapadi''s or Sanskrit ''stuti''s like the ''Dashavatara Stotra'' (depicting the ten incarnations of ]) or the ''] Stotra'' (half man, half woman form of the divine).{{citation needed|date=August 2016}} Many regionally performed Abhinaya compositions are based on the Radha-Krishna theme.<ref name="Verma2011p43"/> The Astapadis of the Radha-Krishna love poem '']'' written by Jayadeva are usually performed in Odisha, as part of the dance repertoire.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/>{{Sfn|Kapila Vatsyayan|1974|p=36}} | |||
The ''natya'' part, or dance drama, is next in sequence. Usually Hindu mythologies, epics and legendary dramas are chosen as themes.{{Sfn|Kapila Vatsyayan|1974|pp=35–37}} | |||
;Dance drama: Usually longer than Abhinaya and typically performed by more than one dancers. Some of the much appreciated dance dramas composed by Guru Kelucharan Mahapatra are: Sudama Dharitra Bhanjana, Mathamani Pradhana, Balya Leela, Rutu Samhara, Krishna Sudama, Dushmanta Sakuntala, Utkala Mauda Mani, Yagnaseni, Meghadoot, Kumara Sambhava, Sapan Nayaka. Usually Hindu mythologies are chosen as themes, but experimenting with the theme and form in recent years have led to extremely unique creations. Some worth-mentioning themes in recent years are Panchakanya, Ganga yamuna, Shrita kamalam, Mrutyuh and Tantra. | |||
A distinctive part of the Odissi tradition is the inclusion of ''Moksha'' (or ''Mokshya''<ref name=aroyo267/>) finale in the performance sequence. This the concluding item of a recital.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/> ] in Hindu traditions means “spiritual liberation”. This dance movement traditionally attempts to convey a sense of spiritual release and soul liberation, soaring into the realm of pure aesthetics.<ref name=aroyo267/> Movement and pose merge in a fast pace pure dance climax.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/> | |||
;Moksha: The concluding item of a recital. Moksha means “spiritual liberation”. This dance represents a spiritual culmination for the dancer who soars into the realm of pure aesthetic delight. Movement and pose merge to create ever new patterns, ever new designs in space and time. The dance moves onto a crescendo that is thrilling to both, the eye and the ear. With the cosmic sound of the “Om”, the dance dissolves into nothingness — just like Moksha or the deliverance of the soul in real life. | |||
] | |||
=== Basic moves and mudras === | |||
==Odissi terminology== | |||
] | ] | ||
]]] | |||
The basic unit of Odissi are called ''bhangas''. These are made up of eight ''belis'', or body positions and movements, combined in many varieties.{{sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=210–212}} Motion is ''uthas'' (rising or up), ''baithas'' (sitting or down) or ''sthankas'' (standing).{{sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=210–212}} The gaits or movement on the dance floor is called ''chaalis'', with movement tempo linked to emotions according to the classical Sanskrit texts. Thus, for example, ''burhas'' or quick pace suggest excitement, while a slow confused pace suggests dejection. For aesthetics, movement is centered on a core, a point in space or floor, and each dancer has her imaginary square of space, with spins and expression held within it.{{sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=210–212}} The foot movement or ''pada bhedas'' too have basic dance units, and Odissi has six of these, in contrast to four found in most classical Indian dances.{{sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=210–212}} | |||
The three primary dance positions in Odissi are:<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/> | |||
;Alap: In Indian classical music this is the slow introductory movement in raga. It is free of rhythm. | |||
*''Chouka'' – the square position, with weight equally placed on the two legs in a squatting position, spine straight, arms raised up with elbows bent.<ref name="bhumidance.com">{{cite web | url=https://www.bhumidance.com/basics-1 | title=Basics }}</ref> | |||
;Anadha: Hide category of the 4 musical divisions, e.g. Mardala, Tabla, and Mridangam. | |||
*''Abhanga'' – the body weight shifts to one foot, while the feet and knees are kept forward in a standing position, one hip extending sideways and torso deflected away from supporting leg.<ref name="bhumidance.com"/> | |||
;Asanjukta Dhvanis: Sound created by striking the Mardala with one hand. | |||
*''Tribhanga'' – is an S-shaped three-fold bending of body, with torso deflecting in one direction while the head and hips deflecting in the opposite direction of torso. Further, the hands and legs frame the body into a composite of two squares (rectangle), providing an aesthetic frame of reference. This is described in the ancient Sanskrit texts, and forms of it are found in other Hindu dance arts, but ''tribhanga'' postures developed most in and are distinctive to Odissi, and they are found in historic Hindu temple reliefs.<ref name="NettlStone1998p520 "/> | |||
;Avartan(a): One complete cycle of a taal. | |||
;Bani: Odissi term used to describe the spoken drum neumonics. During dance performances Bani are spoken by the percussionist or the guru. | |||
;Bhago: In taal, this would be the groups the taal is divided into. Also the points on which the tali, or khali would be. e.g., Adital (Odissi) is divided into 4 groups of 4 beats. It is said that Adital has 4 Bhago. These are the measures. Odissi music term. | |||
;Bhajan: Devotional song. | |||
;Chondo: In tal, this would be how the divisions of the tal are divided. e.g., in Adital (Odissi), the sixteen beats are divided into 4 groups of 4. So the Chondo for Adital is 4 + 4 + 4 + 4. This describes what the Bhagos are. | |||
;Devadasis: Original temple dancers who were "servitresses of God" | |||
;Gita Govinda: Jayadev's famous poem depicting the life of Radha and Krishna. Themes from this poem tremendously affect the classical arts of India. | |||
;Goti: The barrel-shaped tension pegs which adorn the Mardala. These are made from wood and can be shifted and more straps (Pitha) can overlap them to create more or less tension for tuning. | |||
;Gotipua: Young boys trained in the fine art of Odissi dance. The Gotipuas were allowed to leave the temple and dance for the public. The current form of Odissi is heavily influenced by the Gotipua tradition (and also the temple carvings from Odisha.) | |||
;Khondo Ukutto: When bani and ukuttos are formed together to make phrases. e.g., Kititaka gadigana. Odissi term. | |||
;Mano: The ending sequence that is repeated to designate that the ending of the piece or of a section. Typically in 3 repeats. Odissi term. People in Odisha inter change Tihai and Mano. But they mean the same. | |||
;Maharis or devadasis: the original temple dancers of Odisha, but now extinct. This is the root of Odissi dance that was later taught to young boys, Gotipuas. The style is now modernized and work is being done to preserve it.<ref>http://www.mardala.com/theory/terms/</ref> | |||
''Mudras'' or ''Hastas'' are hand gestures which are used to express the meaning of a given act.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p64"/> Like all classical dances of India, the aim of Odissi is in part to convey emotions, mood and inner feelings in the story by appropriate hand and facial gestures. There are 63 ''Hastas'' in modern Odissi dance, and these have the same names or structure as those in the pan-Indian Hindu texts, but most closely matching those in the ''Abhinaya Chandrika''.{{sfn|Reginald Massey|2004|pp=210–212}}<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p64"/> These are subdivided into three, according to the traditional texts:<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p64"/> | |||
==Odissi music== | |||
* Asamyukta Hasta – Single hand Mudras – 28 Prakar (gestures, for instance to communicate a salute, prayer, embrace, energy, bond, swing, carriage, shell, arrow, holding a thing, wheel, and so on.) | |||
{{Main|Odissi music}} | |||
* Samyukta Hasta – Double hand Mudras – 24 Prakar (gestures, for instance to indicate a flag, flower, type of bird or animal, moon, action like grasping, and so on.) | |||
* Nritya Hasta – “Pure Dance” Mudras | |||
The Mudra system is derived from the "Abhinaya Darpana" by Nandikeshavara and the ancient ''Natya Shastra'' of Bharata Muni.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p64">{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=64–67}}</ref> | |||
Odissi dance accompanied by Odissi music. Odissi music is a synthesis of four classes of music, i.e. ], ], ] and ]. The dhruvapada is the first line or lines to be sung repeatedly. The use of art in music is called chitikala. Kavisurya Baladeva Rath, the renowned Odia poet wrote lyrics which are the best examples of chitrakala. Chitrapada means the arrangement of words in an alliterative style. All these were combined to form the style peculiar to Odissi music. Chhanda (metrical section) contains the essence of Odissi music. The chhandas were composed combining bhava (theme), kala (time), and swara (tune) The chaurisha represents the originality of Odissi style. All the thirty-four letters of the Odia alphabet from 'Ka' to 'Ksha' are used chronologically at the beginning of each line. A special feature of Odissi music is the padi which consists of words to be sung in druta tala (fast beat). Odissi music can be sung to different talas: navatala nine beats), dashatala(ten beats) or egar tala (eleven beats). Odissi ragas are different from the ragas of Hindustani and Karnataki music. The chief Odissi ragas are Kalyana, Nata, Shree Gowda, Baradi, Panchama, Dhanashri, Karnata, Bhairavee and Shokabaradi. | |||
Odissi music is sung through Raganga, Bhabanga and Natyanga Dhrubapadanga followed by Champu, Chhanda, Chautisa, ], ], Janana, and ], which are also considered to be in the repertoire of Odissi or an allied act form of Odissi. | |||
Odissi music has codified grammars, which are presented with specified Raagas. It has also a distinctive rendition style. It is lyrical in its movement with wave-like ornamentation. The pace of singing in Odissi is not very fast nor slow, and it maintains a proportional tempo which is very soothing. | |||
===Costumes=== | |||
==Costume and Jewellery== | |||
] | |||
''See also: ] and ]'' | |||
The Odissi dancers are colorfully dressed with makeup and jewellery. The ] worn by Odissi dancers are brightly coloured, and usually of local silk (''Pattasari'').<ref>{{cite book|author=Dhirendranath Patnaik|title=Odissi dance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TBtHAQAAIAAJ|year=1990|publisher=Odisha Sangeet Natak Adademi|pages=112–113}}</ref> It is worn with pleats, or may have a pleat tailor stitched in front, to allow maximum flexibility during the footwork.<ref name=nettl521/> These saris have traditional prints of ] with regional designs and embellishments, and may be the ] and ].{{citation needed|date=August 2016}} | |||
] at work before a dance performance]] | |||
The jewelry is made from intricate filigree silver jewelry pieces. ], in French, means “thin wire,” and in Odia it is called Tarakasi. This highly skilled art form is more than 500 years old and is traditionally done by local artisans on the Eastern shores of Odisha.<ref>http://www.odissivilas.org/costumes.htm</ref> The jewelry pieces themselves are an important part of the Odissi dancer’s costume. They are the ] (forehead ornament), allaka (head piece on which the tikka hangs), unique ear covers in intricate shapes, usually depicting a peacock’s feathers, with jimkis (bell shaped earrings) hanging from them, two necklaces- a smaller necklace worn close to the neck and a longer necklace with a hanging pendant, and two sets of bangles worn on the upper arm and wrist. The process of creating each piece takes the collaboration of many artisans each specialized in one step of the many that turns a lump of raw silver into a handcrafted work of art. | |||
The jewellery includes silver pieces, a metal favored in regional tradition.<ref name=gaston81>{{cite book|author=Anne-Marie Gaston|editor=Hillary P. Rodrigues|title=Studying Hinduism in Practice|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=u9eoAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA81|year=2012|publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-68097-7 |pages=81 }}</ref> The hair is tied up, and typically drawn into an elaborate bun resembling a Hindu temple spire, and decorated with ''seenthi''.<ref name=nettl521/><ref>{{cite book|author=Dhirendranath Patnaik|title=Odissi dance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TBtHAQAAIAAJ|year=1990|publisher=Odisha Sangeet Natak Adademi|pages=9–11}}</ref> The hairstyle may contain a moon shaped crest of white flowers,<ref name=nettl521/> or a reed crown called ''mukoot'' with peacock feathers (symbolism for ]). The dancers forehead is marked with '']'', and adorned with various jewelry such as the ''allaka'' (head piece on which the tikka hangs). The eyes are ringed with ] (black eyeliner).<ref name="Patnaik1990p115">{{cite book|author=Dhirendranath Patnaik|title=Odissi dance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TBtHAQAAIAAJ|year=1990|publisher=Odisha Sangeet Natak Adademi|pages=113–115}}</ref> | |||
Ear covers called ''kapa'' or ear rings decorate the sides of the head, while necklace adorns the neck. The dancer wears a pair of armlets also called ''bahichudi'' or ''bajuband'', on the upper arm. The wrist is covered with ''kankana'' (bangles).<ref name="Patnaik1990p115"/> At the waist they wear an elaborate belt which ties down one end of the sari. The ankles are decorated with a leather piece on top of which are bells ('']'').<ref name=gaston81/> The dancer's palms and soles may be painted with red coloured dye called the '']''.<ref name="Patnaik1990p115"/> | |||
===Head piece=== | |||
The crown, or mahkoot, worn by the Odissi dancer is made only in the devotional city of ] in Eastern Odisha. It is formed from the dried reed called sola in a tradition called sola kama. The reed is carved by a series of cuts into the rode-like stem and forms various types of flowers when a string is tied in the middle of the rod and pulled tight. As the string tightens, flowers bloom into, jasmines, champa - one of the five flowers of Lord Krishna’s arrows, and kadamba - the flowers of the tree under which Radha would wait for her beloved Lord Krishna. | |||
Modern Odissi male performers wear ''dhoti'' – a broadcloth tied around waist, pleated for movement, and tucked between legs; usually extends to knee or lower. Upper body is bare chested, and a long thin folded translucent sheet wrapping over one shoulder and usually tucked below a wide belt.<ref name=nettl521>{{cite book|author1=Bruno Nettl|author2=Ruth M. Stone|author3=James Porter|display-authors=etal|title=The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: South Asia : the Indian subcontinent|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ZOlNv8MAXIEC&pg=PA319 |year=1998|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-0-8240-4946-1 |pages=521 }}</ref>{{Odissi Classical Music sidebar}} | |||
The mahkoot consists of two parts. The flower decorated back piece, called the ghoba, sits around the dancer’s hair pulled into a bun at the back of the head. This piece represents the lotus with a thousand petals that lies above the head in the head chakra, or energy center. The longer piece that emerges from the center of the back piece is called the thiya and this represents the temple spire of Lord ] or the ] of Lord ]. | |||
=== Music and instruments === | |||
The ] worn by Odissi dancers are generally coloured with bright shades of orange, purple, red or green. This saree features traditional prints of Odisha and shiny embellishment. This costume are drapped around the body in unique traditional way unlike other classical dance of India. Generally ] is being used in Odissi dance more than any other type of Sarees. The make-up of an Odissi dancer include ] (red dot) is applied on the forehead with a pattern made from sandalwood around it. ] (black eyeliner) is applied around the eyes with a broad outline to give them an elongated look. | |||
{{Main|Odissi music}} | |||
Odissi dance is accompanied by the traditional classical music of the state of Odisha, ]. The primary Odissi ragas are ''Kalyana'', ''Nata'', ''Shree Gowda'', ''Baradi'', ''Panchama'', ''Dhanashri'', ''Karnata'', ''Bhairavee'' and ''Shokabaradi''.<ref name="orissaculture.gov.in">{{cite web|url=http://orissaculture.gov.in/dance.asp|title=Culture Department|publisher=Orissaculture.gov.in|access-date=19 May 2012|archive-date=3 April 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120403151246/http://www.orissaculture.gov.in/dance.asp|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
==Odissi gurus and performers== | |||
] ], Guru Pankaj Charan Das ,Guru Deba Prasad Das and Guru Raghunath Dutta were the four major gurus who revived Odissi in the late forties and early fifties. ], the great exponent of Odissi, was a leading disciple of Guru Kelucharan Mohapatra's and popularized Odissi by performing extensively, both in India and abroad. In the mid-sixties, two other disciples of Kelucharan Mohapatra, Kumkum Mohanty and ], were best known for their performances, both in India and abroad. Shrimati Laximipriya Mohapatra performed a piece of Odissi abhinaya in the Annapurna Theatre in Cuttack in 1948. This is widely upheld as the first ever performance of a classical Odissi dance item after its contemporary revival.<ref>http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100809/jsp/orissa/story_12788878.jsp</ref> | |||
] | |||
Most of the present day gurus were Gotipua dancers themselves, and have trained dancers and teachers all over India and abroad. In the early fifties, the outside world began to take note of Odissi. Priyambada Mohanty Hejmadi and Dr. Susama Tej represented Odisha in the classical dance category at the Inter University Youth Festival, New Delhi, in 1954 and 1955. It was here that Dr. Charles Fabri witnessed their performances, hailed Odissi as a great classical dance form, and helped ] and ] study it. Sadly, Priyambada Mohanty Hejmadi left for the US for 16 long years, where she hardly performed, barring a recital or two here and there. She returned to India only in the mid-nineteen seventies, by which time well known dancers had already occupied a permanent and prominent space on the Odissi horizon, and by which time Odissi had evolved considerably. The baton in India was wielded gloriously, and with outstanding success and public acclaim, by Sanjukta Panigrahi, Kumkum Mohanty and Sonal Mansingh, each of whom was a major and distinctive star. | |||
Odissi dance, states Ragini Devi, is a form of "visualized music", wherein the '']s'' and ''Raginis'', respectively the primary and secondary musical modes, are integrated by the musicians and interpreted through the dancer.{{Sfn|Ragini Devi|1990|pp=147–149}} Each note is a means, has a purpose and with a mood in classical Indian music, which Odissi accompanies to express sentiments in a song through ''Parija''.{{Sfn|Ragini Devi|1990|pp=147–149}} This is true whether the performance is formal, or less formal as in ''Nartana'' and ''Natangi'' used during festive occasions and the folksy celebration of life.{{Sfn|Ragini Devi|1990|pp=147–149}} | |||
], Pankaj Charan Das, Deba Prasad Das, Mayadhar Raut, Raghunath Dutt, ], Surendranath Jena, Kumkum Mohanty, Ritha Devi, Minati Misra, Bandana Das, Sonal Mansingh, Oopali Operajita, Kumkum Lal, Cuckoo Meena Mohanty, Dr. Nandita Samuel, Bijoylaxmi Das, and Protima Bedi contributed notably to the propagation of Odissi, starting in the fifties, right up to the eighties and nineties: the golden years of the Odissi renaissance. | |||
Like most Indian dance forms, an Odissi troupe performs with the accompaniment of a musical ensemble. The mini-orchestra consists of a number of instruments, often varying slightly by region; the ubiquitous '']''<ref name="Courtney, David and Chandrakantha">{{cite web|url=https://chandrakantha.com/articles/indian_music/nritya/odissi.html#:~:text=This%20necessitates%20a%20technique%20which,as%20a%20separate%20classical%20system |title=Odissi |author=Courtney, David and Chandrakantha |website=Chandrakantha.com |date=1998–2021}}</ref> is used for a consistent, droning ambience throughout, with either the '']'' (a barrel drum variant of the '']''),<ref name="Courtney, David and Chandrakantha"/> '']'' or '']'' for percussion. Melodic instruments range from the ], '']'' (bamboo flute) or '']'' to the '']'' and ].<ref name="Courtney, David and Chandrakantha"/> Additionally, '']'' (]) or other small, percussive instruments may be used.<ref name="Courtney, David and Chandrakantha"/><ref name="NettlStone1998p520" /> At times, vocalists may be featured, usually singing simple, rhythmic phrases and melodies with dancing specifically choreographed to match. | |||
Eminent contemporary gurus and performers include Hare Krishna Behera, ], ], Gita Mahalik, Oopali Operajita, Aruna Mohanty, Nandita Behera, Madhavi Mudgal, Snehaprava Samantaray, Trinath Maharana, Durga Charan Ranbir, ], Kiran Segal, Giridhari Naik, Sharmila Biswas, Sutapa Talukdar, Ileana Citaristi, , Ratikant Mohapatra, ],<ref>http://sujatamohapatra.com</ref> Ranjana Gauhar, Daksha Mashruwala, Poushali Mukherjee, Sharmila Mukherjee, , Chitralekha Patnaik, Ramli Ibrahim, Manoranjan Pradhan, ], Madhumita Raut, Jyoti Rout, ], Bijayini Satpathy, Surupa Sen, Kasturi Pattanaik, Meera Das and Bichitrananda Swain. | |||
] | |||
Some of the upcoming Odissi performers are ], ], Kavita Dwivedi, Yudhistir Nayak, Lingaraj Pradhan, Pabitra Kumar Pradhan, Bijay Sahoo, , , Rajashri Praharaj, Madhusmita Mohanty, Rajashree Chintak Behera, Sandhyadipa Kar, Rajika Puri, Vishnu Tattwa Das, Saswati Garai-Ghosh, Shibani Patnaik, Sreyashi Dey, Bani Ray, Shreelina Ghosh, Aadya Kaktikar, Sonali Mishra, Dr. Bidisha Mohanty, Niharika Mohanty, Arushi Mudgal, Ayona Bhaduri, Rekha Tandon and several others around the world. | |||
===Styles=== | |||
==Odissi in Popular Culture== | |||
The Odissi tradition existed in three schools: ''Mahari, Nartaki'', and ''Gotipua'': | |||
===In India=== | |||
* ''Maharis'' were Oriya ]s or temple girls, their name deriving from ''Maha'' (great) and ''Nari'' (girl), or ''Mahri'' (chosen) particularly those at the temple of ] at ]. Early Maharis performed ''Nritta'' (pure dance) and ] (interpretation of poetry) dedicated to various Hindu gods and goddesses, as well as Puranic mythologies and Vedic legends.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p49"/> Later, Maharis especially performed dance sequences based on the lyrics of ]'s '']''.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p49">{{cite book|author1=Sunil Kothari|author2=Avinash Pasricha|title=Odissi, Indian classical dance art |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P_0MAQAAMAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Marg Publications|isbn=978-81-85026-13-8|pages=41–49 }}</ref> This style is more sensuous and closer to the classical Sanskrit texts on dance, music and performance arts.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p49"/> | |||
1993: Dressed in a resplendent orange ''sanyasin'' dhoti (probably inspired by the Mayurbhanj Chau costume worn in Shiva Tandava items), renowned actress Meenakshi Sheshadri danced a tandava item composed chiefly in Odissi in the film ]. | |||
* ''Gotipuas'' were boys dressed up as girls and taught the dance by the Maharis. This style included martial arts, athletics and acrobatics. Gotipuas danced to these compositions outside the temples and fairgrounds as folksy entertainment.<ref name="KothariPasricha1990p49"/> | |||
* ''Nartaki'' dance took place in the royal courts, where it was prevalent before the British period.<ref>Alessandra Lopez y Royo, "The reinvention of odissi classical dance as a temple ritual," published in ''The Archaeology of Ritual'' ed. Evangelos Kyriakidis, Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, UCLA 2007</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Dhirendranath Patnaik|title=Odissi dance|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=TBtHAQAAIAAJ |year=1990|publisher=Odisha Sangeet Natak Adademi|pages=84–85}}</ref> | |||
== Schools, training and recognition == | |||
1996: Rekha was seen imparting Odissi dance lessons (Shikhandika pose) to a group of young learners, while Indira Varma was shown learning Odissi steps to the accompaniment of the mardala in Mira Nair's magnum opus film ]. | |||
] | |||
2003: Rani Mukherjee performed a dance at the ] function dressed in Odissi costume and a number of celebrated Odissi expressed disapproval for insulting the integrity of the dance and the costume.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kolkata-/Rani-on-wrong-foot-over-Odissi-number/articleshow/47200979.cms | work=The Times Of India}}</ref> | |||
=== Odissi maestros and performers === | |||
2007: An entire sequence of dance in Odissi costume was featured near the end of the Bollywood movie ] and was performed by actress ] and Malayalam actor ]. | |||
], ], ] and Raghunath Dutta were the four major gurus who revived Odissi in the late forties and early fifties. ] was a leading disciple of Kelucharan Mohapatra who popularized Odissi by performing in India and abroad. In the mid-sixties, three other disciples of Kelucharan Mohapatra, ] and ], were known for their performances in India and abroad. Some other notable disciples include, Debi Basu, ], ], Daksha Mashruwala and ]. Laximipriya Mohapatra performed a piece of Odissi abhinaya in the Annapurna Theatre in Cuttack in 1948, a show upheld as the first classical Odissi dance performance after its contemporary revival.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100809/jsp/orissa/story_12788878.jsp | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130728151333/http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100809/jsp/orissa/story_12788878.jsp | url-status=dead | archive-date=28 July 2013 | location=Calcutta, India | work=The Telegraph | title=Steps to success | date=9 August 2010}}</ref> Guru ] played a pivotal role in giving Odissi dance its classical status. He introduced ''Mudra Vinyoga'' in 1955 and ''Sancharibhava'' in the Odissi dance items, and portrayed ''Shringara Rasa'' in ''] Ashthapadis''. His notable compositions include ''Pashyati Dishi Dishi'' and ''Priya Charu Shile'', composed in 1961.<ref>Kaktikar, A. ''Odissi Yaatra: The Journey of Guru Mayadhar Raut''. Delhi: B. R. Rhythms. 2010. {{ISBN|978-81-88827-21-3}}.</ref> | |||
== Schools == | |||
2009: Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty, who took Odissi lessons for an India-China joint film venture, ] loosely based on the life of Odissi dancer Pratima Gauri Bedi. | |||
{{State of Odisha}} | |||
=== |
=== IIT Bhubaneswar === | ||
Odissi has been included in ]'s ] syllabus since 2015 as the first Indian national technical institute to introduce any classical dance in syllabus.<ref name=TOI11September2015>{{cite news|last=Pradhan|first=Ashok|title=IIT Bhubaneswar becomes first IIT in country to introduce dance as BTech subject|url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/education/news/IIT-Bhubaneswar-becomes-first-IIT-in-country-to-introduce-dance-as-BTech-subject/articleshow/48911403.cms|access-date=13 September 2015|work=The Times of India|date=11 September 2015}}</ref><ref name=Hin12September2015>{{cite news|last1=Barik|first1=Satyasundar|title=IIT-Bhubaneswar to train students in Odissi too|url=http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/iitbhubaneswar-to-train-students-in-odissi-too/article7642531.ece|access-date=13 September 2015|work=The Hindu|date=12 September 2015}}</ref><ref name=NIE12September2015>{{cite news|title=IIT-Bhubaneswar Becomes First IIT to Introduce Odissi as a Course|url=http://www.newindianexpress.com/states/odisha/IIT-Bhubaneswar-Becomes-First-IIT-to-Introduce-Odissi-as-a-Course/2015/09/11/article3022753.ece|access-date=13 September 2015|work=The New Indian Express|date=12 September 2015|archive-date=12 September 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150912190353/http://www.newindianexpress.com/states/odisha/IIT-Bhubaneswar-Becomes-First-IIT-to-Introduce-Odissi-as-a-Course/2015/09/11/article3022753.ece|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
1991: A short (23 second) Odissi dance scene was featured in ]'s music video of ]. The legendary pop-singer and dancer performs some Odissi, too.<ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXoA6jajTJY</ref> | |||
] on the largest Odissi dance event.]] | |||
1998: ] danced along with Odissi dancers live on stage during the 1998 MTV Award ceremony. US-based Odissi performers, Patnaik Sisters, were chosen to choreograph and perform alongside the legendary pop artist.<ref>http://www.narthaki.com/info/rev08/rev571.html</ref> | |||
===In Guinness World records=== | |||
==Further reading== | |||
] has acknowledged the feat of the largest congregation of Odissi dancers in a single event. 555 Odissi dancers performed at the event hosted on 23 December 2011, in the Kalinga stadium, Bhubaneswar, Odisha. The dancers performed the ''mangalacharana, Battu, Pallavi, Abhinaya'' and ''Mokshya'' dance items from the Odissi repertoire.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://newindianexpress.com/states/odisha/article335732.ece|title=Odissi dancers enter Guinness|website=The New Indian Express|access-date=27 March 2018|archive-date=15 September 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160915060502/http://www.newindianexpress.com/states/odisha/article335732.ece|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.thesundayindian.com/en/story/guinness-world-records-enlists-odissi-dance-show/254/29065/|title=Guinness World Records enlists Odissi dance show – Subrat dash – The Sunday Indian|website=thesundayindian.com|access-date=9 September 2021|archive-date=27 October 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211027153954/http://www.thesundayindian.com/en/story/guinness-world-records-enlists-odissi-dance-show/254/29065/|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
*''Odissi Dance'', by Dhirendranath Patnaik. Published by Orissa Sangeet Natak Akademi, 1971. | |||
*''Odissi - The Dance Divine'', by Ranjana Gauhar and Dushyant Parasher. Published by Niyogi Books, 2007. ISBN 81-89738-17-8 | |||
More than 1000 Odissi dancers performed at the World Cultural Festival<ref>{{cite web|url=http://zeenews.india.com/entertainment/and-more/live-watch-art-of-living-s-world-culture-festival-2016-day-2_1864974.html|title=LIVE: Watch – Art of Living's World Culture Festival 2016 – Day 2|date=12 March 2016|website=india.com|access-date=27 March 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://odishasuntimes.com/2015/12/16/sri-sri-to-visit-odisha-to-prepare-for-world-culture-festival/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160402085721/http://odishasuntimes.com/2015/12/16/sri-sri-to-visit-odisha-to-prepare-for-world-culture-festival/|url-status=usurped|archive-date=2 April 2016|title=Sri Sri to visit Odisha to prepare for World Culture Festival |last=Ayaskant|website=odishasuntimes.com|access-date=27 March 2018}}</ref> 12 March 2016. This is till date the largest congregation of Odissi dancers in a single event. | |||
*''Odissi, Indian Classical Dance Art: Odisi Nritya'', by ], Avinash Pasricha. Marg Publications, 1990. ISBN 81-85026-13-0. | |||
*''Perspectives on Odissi Theatre'', by Ramesh Prasad Panigrahi, Orissa Sangeet Natak Akademi. Published by Orissa Sangeet Natak Akademi, 1998. | |||
===Odissi Centre at Oxford University=== | |||
*''Abhinaya-chandrika and Odissi dance'', by Maheshwar Mahapatra, Alekha Chandra Sarangi, Sushama Kulshreshthaa, Maya Das. Eastern Book Linkers, 2001. ISBN 81-7854-010-X. | |||
] announcing the ].]] | |||
*''Rethinking Odissi'', by Dinanath Pathy. Published by Harman Pub. House, 2007. ISBN 81-86622-88-8. | |||
An Odissi dance centre has been opened from January 2016, at the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.telegraphindia.com/1160113/jsp/odisha/story_63528.jsp|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160116080818/http://www.telegraphindia.com/1160113/jsp/odisha/story_63528.jsp|url-status=dead|archive-date=16 January 2016|title=Odissi beats to resonate at Oxford University|website=The Telegraph (India)|access-date=27 March 2018}}</ref> Known as ], it is an initiative of the Odissi dancer and choreographer ] who is also a post-graduate scholar at the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://odishasuntimes.com/2015/12/26/odissi-centre-to-open-at-oxford-university-from-jan/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160121150255/http://odishasuntimes.com/2015/12/26/odissi-centre-to-open-at-oxford-university-from-jan/|url-status=usurped|archive-date=21 January 2016|title=Odissi Centre to open at Oxford University from Jan |last=Ayaskant|website=odishasuntimes.com|access-date=27 March 2018}}</ref> | |||
Beside holding regular Odissi dance classes at its institution, the ] also conducts Odissi dance workshops at other academic institutions in the United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dailypioneer.com/print.php?printFOR=storydetail&story_url_key=odishi-centre-to-open-at-oxford-in-january§ion_url_key=state-editions|title=The Pioneer|website=The Pioneer (India)|access-date=27 March 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://kalingatv.com/state-news/oxford-university-odissi-centre-jan/|title=Kalinga TV on Facebook|publisher=KalingaTV|access-date=27 March 2018}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*] | |||
*] | *] | ||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | *] | ||
*] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{ |
{{reflist|30em}} | ||
===Bibliography=== | |||
*''Odissi : What, Why and How… Evolution, Revival and Technique'', by ]. Published by B. R. Rhythms, Delhi, 2007. {{ISBN|81-88827-10-X}}. | |||
*''Odissi Yaatra: The Journey of Guru Mayadhar Raut'', by Aadya Kaktikar (ed. ]). Published by B. R. Rhythms, Delhi, 2010. {{ISBN|978-81-88827-21-3}}. | |||
*''Odissi Dance'', by Dhirendranath Patnaik. Published by Odisha Sangeet Natak Akademi, 1971. | |||
*''Odissi – The Dance Divine'', by Ranjana Gauhar and Dushyant Parasher. Published by ], 2007. {{ISBN|81-89738-17-8}}. | |||
*''Odissi, Indian Classical Dance Art: Odisi Nritya'', by ], Avinash Pasricha. Marg Publications, 1990. {{ISBN|81-85026-13-0}}. | |||
*''Perspectives on Odissi Theatre'', by Ramesh Prasad Panigrahi, Odisha Sangeet Natak Akademi. Published by Odisha Sangeet Natak Akademi, 1998. | |||
*''Abhinaya-chandrika and Odissi dance'', by Maheshwar Mahapatra, Alekha Chandra Sarangi, Sushama Kulshreshthaa, Maya Das. Published by Eastern Book Linkers, 2001. {{ISBN|81-7854-010-X}}. | |||
*''Rethinking Odissi'', by Dinanath Pathy. Published by Harman Pub. House, 2007. {{ISBN|81-86622-88-8}}. | |||
*{{cite book|author=Natalia Lidova|publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2014 |doi=10.1093/obo/9780195399318-0071 |title= Natyashastra }} | |||
*{{cite book|author=Natalia Lidova |title=Drama and Ritual of Early Hinduism |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3TKarwqJJP0C |date=1994 |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-1234-5 }} | |||
*{{cite book|author=Ragini Devi|title=Dance Dialects of India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KRz5ykKRVAEC |year=1990 |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-0674-0}} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Williams|first=Drid|title=In the Shadow of Hollywood Orientalism: Authentic East Indian Dancing|url=http://jashm.press.illinois.edu/12.3/12-3IntheShadow_Williams78-99.pdf|journal=Visual Anthropology|volume=17|issue=1|year=2004|pages=69–98|publisher=Routledge|doi=10.1080/08949460490274013|s2cid=29065670|access-date=31 July 2016|archive-date=4 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304121105/http://jashm.press.illinois.edu/12.3/12-3IntheShadow_Williams78-99.pdf|url-status=dead}} | |||
* {{cite book |author=Tarla Mehta | title=Sanskrit Play Production in Ancient India |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l7naMj1UxIkC | year=1995| publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |isbn=978-81-208-1057-0 }} | |||
* {{cite book|last= Fergusson |first=James |title=The Caves Temples of India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5YqEFKdU8FEC&pg=PA405|year=1880|publisher=W. H. Allen|access-date=2 April 2016}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Michell|first=George l|title=Temple Architecture and Art of the Early Chalukyas: Badami, Mahakuta, Aihole, Pattadakal|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-1TroAEACAAJ|date=15 October 2014|publisher=Niyogi Books|isbn=978-93-83098-33-0}} | |||
* {{cite book|author=Reginald Massey|title=India's Dances: Their History, Technique, and Repertoire|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t6MJ8jbHqIwC |year=2004|publisher=Abhinav Publications|isbn=978-81-7017-434-9 }} | |||
*{{cite book|author= Emmie Te Nijenhuis |author-link=Emmie te Nijenhuis |title=Indian Music: History and Structure |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NrgfAAAAIAAJ |year=1974|publisher= BRILL Academic|isbn=90-04-03978-3 }} | |||
*{{cite book|author=Kapila Vatsyayan |title=Bharata, the Nāṭyaśāstra |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zKW1PAAACAAJ |year=2001|publisher=Sahitya Akademi |isbn=978-81-260-1220-6}} | |||
*{{cite book| author=Kapila Vatsyayan |title=Classical Indian dance in literature and the arts |year=1977 |publisher=Sangeet Natak Akademi |oclc= 233639306}}, | |||
*{{citation| author=Kapila Vatsyayan |title=Indian classical dance |year=1974 |publisher=Sangeet Natak Akademi |oclc= 2238067 }} | |||
*{{cite book| author=Kapila Vatsyayan |title=Aesthetic theories and forms in Indian tradition |year=2008 |publisher=Munshiram Manoharlal |oclc= 286469807| isbn= 978-8187586357}} | |||
*{{cite book| author=Kapila Vatsyayan |title=Dance In Indian Painting |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=58fUibaZdGYC |publisher=Abhinav Publications |isbn=978-81-7017-153-9}} | |||
*{{cite journal | author =Wallace Dace | title=The Concept of "Rasa" in Sanskrit Dramatic Theory | journal=Educational Theatre Journal | volume=15 | issue=3 | pages=249–254 | year=1963 | jstor=3204783 | doi=10.2307/3204783 }} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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*, Arabhi Pallav, New Delhi 2013 | |||
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*, Vancouver 2014 | |||
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* Pushkar 2014 | |||
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* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110318135952/http://www.dmoz.org/Arts/Performing_Arts/Dance/Classical_Indian/Odissi/ |date=18 March 2011 }} at the Open Directory | |||
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* | *, Classical Indian Dance Portal | ||
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* JN Dhar, Orissa Review | |||
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Latest revision as of 01:53, 28 December 2024
Classical dance of India Not to be confused with the Odissi music and Odishi, a historical district of western Georgia.
Odissi | |
Genre | Indian classical dance |
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Origin | Odisha, India |
Odissi( ଓଡ଼ିଶୀ"')also referred to as Orissi in old literature, Oldest surviving classical dance of India, is a major ancient Indian classical dance that originated in the temples of Odisha – an eastern coastal state of India. Odissi, in its history, was performed predominantly by women, and expressed religious stories and spiritual ideas, particularly of Vaishnavism through songs written and composed according to the ragas & talas of Odissi music by ancient poets of the state. Odissi performances have also expressed ideas of other traditions such as those related to Hindu deities Shiva and Surya, as well as Hindu goddesses (Shaktism).
The theoretical foundations of Odissi trace to the ancient Sanskrit text Natya Shastra, its existence in antiquity evidenced by the dance poses in the sculptures of Kalingan temples, and archeological sites related to Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism. It was suppressed under the British Rule. The suppression was protested by the Indians, followed by its revival, reconstruction and expansion since India gained independence from the colonial rule.
Odissi is traditionally a dance-drama genre of performance art, where the artist(s) and musicians play out a story, a spiritual message or devotional poem from the Hindu texts, using symbolic costumes, body movement, abhinaya (expressions) and mudras (gestures and sign language) set out in ancient Sanskrit literature. Classical Odia literature & the Gita Govinda set to traditional Odissi music are used for the abhinaya. Odissi is learnt and performed as a composite of basic dance motif called the Bhangas (symmetric body bends, stance). It involves lower (footwork), mid (torso) and upper (hand and head) body as three sources of perfecting expression and audience engagement with geometric symmetry and rhythmic musical resonance. An Odissi performance repertoire includes invocation, nritta (pure dance), nritya (expressive dance), natya (dance drama) and moksha (dance climax connoting salvation of the soul and spiritual release).
Traditional Odissi exists in two major styles, the first perfected by women and focussed on solemn, spiritual temple dance (maharis); the second perfected by boys dressed as girls (gotipuas) which diversified to include athletic and acrobatic moves, and were performed from festive occasions in temples to general folksy entertainment. Modern Odissi productions by Indian artists have presented a diverse range of experimental ideas, culture fusion, themes and plays.
Odissi was the only Indian dance form present in Michael Jackson's 1991 hit single "Black or White".
History of Odissi
The foundations of Odissi are found in Natya Shastra, the ancient Hindu Sanskrit text of performance arts. The basic dance units described in the Natya Shastra, all 108 of them, are identical to those in Odissi. The text is attributed to the ancient scholar Bharata Muni, and its first complete compilation is dated to between 200 BCE and 200 CE, but estimates vary between 500 BCE and 500 CE. The most studied version of the Natya Shastra text consists of about 6000 verses structured into 36 chapters. The text, states Natalia Lidova, describes the theory of Tāṇḍava dance (Shiva), the theory of rasa, of bhāva, expression, gestures, acting techniques, basic steps, standing postures – all of which are part of Indian classical dances. Dance and performance arts, states this ancient text, are a form of expression of spiritual ideas, virtues and the essence of scriptures. The Natya Shastra refers to four pravrittis (methods of expressive delivery) in vogue – Avanti, Dakshinatya, Panchali and Odra-Magadhi ; of these, the Odra refers to Odisha.
More direct historical evidence of dance and music as an ancient performance art are found in archaeological sites such as caves and in temple carvings of Bhubaneswar, Konark and Puri. The Manchapuri cave in Udayagiri shows carvings of dance and musicians, and this has been dated to the time of Jain king Kharavela in the first or second century BCE. The Hathigumpha inscriptions, also dated to the same ruler, mention music and dance :
(he ) versed in the science of the Gandharvas (i.e., music), entertains the capital with the exhibition of dapa, dancing, singing and instrumental music and by causing to be held festivities and assemblies (samajas)...
— Hathigumpha inscription, Line 5, ~ 2nd–1st century BCE
The classical music tradition of Odisha, known as Odissi music, also has ancient roots. Archeologists have reported the discovery of 20-key, carefully shaped polished basalt lithophone in Sankarjang, the highlands of Odisha, which is dated to about 1000 BCE.
Medieval era
The Hindu, Jain and Buddhist archaeological sites in Odisha state, particularly the Assia range of hills show inscriptions and carvings of dances that are dated to the 6th to 9th century CE. Important sites include the Ranigumpha in Udaygiri, and various caves and temples at Lalitgiri, Ratnagiri and Alatgiri sites. The Buddhist icons, for example, are depicted as dancing gods and goddesses, with Heruka, Vajravarahi, and Marichi in Odissi-like postures. Historical evidence, states Alexandra Carter, shows that Odissi Maharis (Hindu temple dancers) and dance halls architecture (nata-mandapa) were in vogue at least by the 9th century CE.
According to Kapila Vatsyayan, the Kalpasutra of Jainism, in its manuscripts discovered in Gujarat, includes classical Indian dance poses – such as the Samapada, the Tribhangi and the Chauka of Odissi. This, states Vatsyayan, suggests that Odissi was admired or at least well known in distant parts of India, far from Odisha in the medieval era, to be included in the margins of an important Jain text. However, the Jain manuscripts use the dance poses as decorative art in the margins and cover, but do not describe or discuss the dance. Hindu dance texts such as the Abhinaya Chandrika and Abhinaya Darpana provide a detailed description of the movements of the feet, hands, the standing postures, the movement and the dance repertoire. It includes illustrations of the karanas mentioned in Natya Shastra. Similarly, the illustrated Hindu text on temple architecture from Odisha, the Shilpa Prakasha, deals with Odia architecture and sculpture, and includes Odissi postures.
Actual sculptures that have survived into the modern era and panel reliefs in Odia temples, dated to be from the 10th to 14th century, show Odissi dance. This is evidenced in Jagannatha temple in Puri, as well as other temples of Vaishnavism, Shaivism, Shaktism and Vedic deities such as Surya (Sun) in Odisha. There are several sculptures of dancers and musicians in Konark Sun Temple and Brahmeswara Temple in Bhubaneswar.
The composition of the poetic texts by 8th century Shankaracharya and particularly of divine love inspired Gitagovinda by 12th century Jayadeva influenced the focus and growth of modern Odissi. Odissi was performed in the temples by the dancers called Maharis, who played out these spiritual poems and underlying religious plays, after training and perfecting their art of dance starting from an early age, and who were revered as auspicious to religious services.
Mughal and British period
After 12th-century, Odia temples, monasteries and nearby institutions such as the Puspagiri in eastern Indian subcontinent came under waves of attacks and ransacking by Muslim armies, a turmoil that impacted all arts and eroded the freedoms previously enjoyed by performance artists. The official records of Sultan Firuz Shah Tughlaq's invasion in Odisha (1360–1361 CE), for example, describe the destruction of the Jagannath temple as well as numerous other temples, defacing of dancing statues, and ruining of dance halls. This led to a broad decline in Odissi and other religious arts, but there were some benevolent rulers in this period who supported arts particularly through performances at courts. During the Sultanate and Mughal era of India, the temple dancers were moved to entertain the Sultan's family and courts. They became associated with concubinage to the nobility.
The Odissi dance likely expanded in the 17th century, states Alexandra Carter, under King Ramachandradeva's patronage. This expansion integrated martial arts (akhanda) and athletics into Odissi dance, by engaging boys and youth called Gotipuas, as a means to physically train the young for the military and to resist foreign invasions. According to Ragini Devi, historical evidence suggests that the Gotipuas tradition was known and nurtured in the 14th century, by Raja of Khordha.
During the British Raj, the officials of the colonial government ridiculed the temple traditions, while Christian missionaries launched a sustained attack on the moral outrage of sensuousness of Odissi and other Hindu temple dance arts. In 1872, a British civil servant named William Hunter watched a performance at the Jagannatha temple in Puri, then wrote, "Indecent ceremonies disgraced the ritual, and dancing girls with rolling eyes put the modest worshipper to the blush...", and then attacked them as idol-worshipping prostitutes who expressed their devotion with "airy gyrations".
Christian missionaries launched the "anti-dance movement" in 1892, to ban all such dance forms. The dancers were frequently stigmatized as prostitutes by Europeans during the colonial era. In 1910, the British colonial government in India banned temple dancing, and the dance artists were reduced to abject poverty from the lack of any financial support for performance arts, combined with stereotyping stigma.
Post-independence
The temple dance ban and the cultural discrimination during the colonial rule marshaled a movement by Hindus to question the stereotypes and to revive the regional arts of India, including Odissi. Due to these efforts, the classical Indian dances witnessed a period of renaissance and reconstruction, which gained momentum particularly after Indians gained their freedom from colonialism.
Odissi, along with several other major Indian dances gained recognition after efforts by many scholars and performers in the 1950s, particularly by Kavichandra Kalicharan Pattanayak, an Oriya poet, dramatist and researcher. Pattanayak is also credited with naming the dance form as "Odissi".
Repertoire
Odissi, in the classical and medieval period has been, a team dance founded on Hindu texts. This drama-dance involved women (Maharis) enacting a spiritual poem or a religious story either in the inner sanctum of a Hindu temple, or in the Natamandira attached to the temple. The Odissi performing Maharis combined pure dance with expression, to play out and communicate the underlying text through abhinaya (gestures). The performance art evolved to include another aspect, wherein teams of boys – dressed as girls – called Gotipuas expanded the Odissi repertoire, such as by adding acrobatics and athletic moves, and they performed both near the temples and open fairs for general folksy entertainment. In the Indian tradition, many of the accomplished gotipuas became the gurus (teachers) in their adulthood. Modern Odissi is a diversified performance art, men have joined the women, and its reconstruction since the 1950s have added new plays and aspects of other Indian dances.
Love is a universal theme and one of the paradigmatic values in Indian religions. This theme is expressed through sensuous love poems and metaphors of sexual union in Krishna-related literature, and as longing eros (Shringara) in its dance arts such as in Odissi, from the early times. Hinduism, states Judith Hanna, encourages the artist to "strive to suggest, reveal or re-create the infinite, divine self", and art is considered as "the supreme means of realizing the Universal Being". Physical intimacy is not something considered as a reason for shame, rather considered a form of celebration and worship, where the saint is the lover and the lover is the saint. This aspect of Odissi dancing has been subdued in the modern post-colonial reconstructions, states Alexandra Carter, and the emphasis has expanded to "expressions of personal artistic excellence as ritualized spiritual articulations".
The traditional Odissi repertoire, like all classical Indian dances, includes Nritta (pure dance, solo), Nritya (dance with emotions, solo) and Natya (dramatic dance, group). These three performance aspects of Odissi are described and illustrated in the foundational Hindu texts, particularly the Natya Shastra, Abhinaya Darpana and the 16th-century Abhinaya Chandrika by Maheshwara Mahapatra of Odisha.
- The Nritta performance is abstract, fast and rhythmic aspect of the dance. The viewer is presented with pure movement in Nritta, wherein the emphasis is the beauty in motion, form, speed, range and pattern. This part of the repertoire has no interpretative aspect, no telling of story. It is a technical performance, and aims to engage the senses (prakriti) of the audience.
- The Nritya is slower and expressive aspect of the dance that attempts to communicate feelings, storyline particularly with spiritual themes in Hindu dance traditions. In a nritya, the dance-acting expands to include silent expression of words through the sign language of gestures and body motion set to musical notes. This part of a repertoire is more than sensory enjoyment, it aims to engage the emotions and mind of the viewer.
- The Natyam is a play, typically a team performance, but can be acted out by a solo performer where the dancer uses certain standardized body movements to indicate a new character in the underlying story. A Natya incorporates the elements of a Nritya.
- The Mokshya is a climatic pure dance of Odissi, aiming to highlight the liberation of soul and serenity in the spiritual.
Odissi dance recitals are in Odia and Sanskrit language in the music strictly follows ragas & talas of the Odissi music tradition. The talas used in Odissi dance are Ekatali, Khemata, Rupaka, Tripata, Jhampa, Jati Tala, Adatali, Matha, Aditala, Sarimana, Kuduka and others.
Sequence
Traditional Odissi repertoire sequence starts with an invocation called Mangalacharana. A shloka (hymn) in praise of a god or goddess is sung, such as to Jagannath (an avatar of Vishnu), the meaning of which is expressed through dance. Mangalacharana is followed by Pushpanjali (offering of flowers) and Bhumi Pranam (salutation to mother earth). The invocation also includes Trikhandi Pranam or the three-fold salutation – to the devas (gods), to the gurus (teachers) and to the lokas or rasikas (fellow dancers and audience).
The next sequential step in an Odissi performance is Batu, also known as Battu Nrutya or Sthayee Nrutya or Batuka Bhairava. It is a fast pace, pure dance (nritta) performed in the honor of Shiva. There is no song or recitation accompanying this part of the dance, just rhythmic music. This pure dance sequence in Odissi builds up to a Pallavi which is often slow, graceful & lyrical movements of the eyes, neck, torso & feet & slowly builds in a crescendo to climax in a fast tempo at the end.
The nritya follows next, and consists of Abhinaya, or an expressional dance which is an enactment of a song or poetry. The dancer(s) communicate the story in a sign language, using mudras (hand gestures), bhavas (enacting mood, emotions), eye and body movement. The dance is fluid, graceful and sensual. Abhinaya in Odissi is performed to verses recited in Sanskrit or Odia language. Most common are Abhinayas on Oriya songs or Sanskrit Ashthapadis or Sanskrit stutis like the Dashavatara Stotra (depicting the ten incarnations of Vishnu) or the Ardhanari Stotra (half man, half woman form of the divine). Many regionally performed Abhinaya compositions are based on the Radha-Krishna theme. The Astapadis of the Radha-Krishna love poem Gita Govinda written by Jayadeva are usually performed in Odisha, as part of the dance repertoire.
The natya part, or dance drama, is next in sequence. Usually Hindu mythologies, epics and legendary dramas are chosen as themes.
A distinctive part of the Odissi tradition is the inclusion of Moksha (or Mokshya) finale in the performance sequence. This the concluding item of a recital. Moksha in Hindu traditions means “spiritual liberation”. This dance movement traditionally attempts to convey a sense of spiritual release and soul liberation, soaring into the realm of pure aesthetics. Movement and pose merge in a fast pace pure dance climax.
Basic moves and mudras
The basic unit of Odissi are called bhangas. These are made up of eight belis, or body positions and movements, combined in many varieties. Motion is uthas (rising or up), baithas (sitting or down) or sthankas (standing). The gaits or movement on the dance floor is called chaalis, with movement tempo linked to emotions according to the classical Sanskrit texts. Thus, for example, burhas or quick pace suggest excitement, while a slow confused pace suggests dejection. For aesthetics, movement is centered on a core, a point in space or floor, and each dancer has her imaginary square of space, with spins and expression held within it. The foot movement or pada bhedas too have basic dance units, and Odissi has six of these, in contrast to four found in most classical Indian dances.
The three primary dance positions in Odissi are:
- Chouka – the square position, with weight equally placed on the two legs in a squatting position, spine straight, arms raised up with elbows bent.
- Abhanga – the body weight shifts to one foot, while the feet and knees are kept forward in a standing position, one hip extending sideways and torso deflected away from supporting leg.
- Tribhanga – is an S-shaped three-fold bending of body, with torso deflecting in one direction while the head and hips deflecting in the opposite direction of torso. Further, the hands and legs frame the body into a composite of two squares (rectangle), providing an aesthetic frame of reference. This is described in the ancient Sanskrit texts, and forms of it are found in other Hindu dance arts, but tribhanga postures developed most in and are distinctive to Odissi, and they are found in historic Hindu temple reliefs.
Mudras or Hastas are hand gestures which are used to express the meaning of a given act. Like all classical dances of India, the aim of Odissi is in part to convey emotions, mood and inner feelings in the story by appropriate hand and facial gestures. There are 63 Hastas in modern Odissi dance, and these have the same names or structure as those in the pan-Indian Hindu texts, but most closely matching those in the Abhinaya Chandrika. These are subdivided into three, according to the traditional texts:
- Asamyukta Hasta – Single hand Mudras – 28 Prakar (gestures, for instance to communicate a salute, prayer, embrace, energy, bond, swing, carriage, shell, arrow, holding a thing, wheel, and so on.)
- Samyukta Hasta – Double hand Mudras – 24 Prakar (gestures, for instance to indicate a flag, flower, type of bird or animal, moon, action like grasping, and so on.)
- Nritya Hasta – “Pure Dance” Mudras
The Mudra system is derived from the "Abhinaya Darpana" by Nandikeshavara and the ancient Natya Shastra of Bharata Muni.
Costumes
The Odissi dancers are colorfully dressed with makeup and jewellery. The sari worn by Odissi dancers are brightly coloured, and usually of local silk (Pattasari). It is worn with pleats, or may have a pleat tailor stitched in front, to allow maximum flexibility during the footwork. These saris have traditional prints of Odisha with regional designs and embellishments, and may be the Sambalpuri sari and Bomkai sari.
The jewellery includes silver pieces, a metal favored in regional tradition. The hair is tied up, and typically drawn into an elaborate bun resembling a Hindu temple spire, and decorated with seenthi. The hairstyle may contain a moon shaped crest of white flowers, or a reed crown called mukoot with peacock feathers (symbolism for Krishna). The dancers forehead is marked with tikka, and adorned with various jewelry such as the allaka (head piece on which the tikka hangs). The eyes are ringed with kajal (black eyeliner).
Ear covers called kapa or ear rings decorate the sides of the head, while necklace adorns the neck. The dancer wears a pair of armlets also called bahichudi or bajuband, on the upper arm. The wrist is covered with kankana (bangles). At the waist they wear an elaborate belt which ties down one end of the sari. The ankles are decorated with a leather piece on top of which are bells (ghungroo). The dancer's palms and soles may be painted with red coloured dye called the alta.
Modern Odissi male performers wear dhoti – a broadcloth tied around waist, pleated for movement, and tucked between legs; usually extends to knee or lower. Upper body is bare chested, and a long thin folded translucent sheet wrapping over one shoulder and usually tucked below a wide belt.
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Music and instruments
Main article: Odissi musicOdissi dance is accompanied by the traditional classical music of the state of Odisha, Odissi music. The primary Odissi ragas are Kalyana, Nata, Shree Gowda, Baradi, Panchama, Dhanashri, Karnata, Bhairavee and Shokabaradi.
Odissi dance, states Ragini Devi, is a form of "visualized music", wherein the Ragas and Raginis, respectively the primary and secondary musical modes, are integrated by the musicians and interpreted through the dancer. Each note is a means, has a purpose and with a mood in classical Indian music, which Odissi accompanies to express sentiments in a song through Parija. This is true whether the performance is formal, or less formal as in Nartana and Natangi used during festive occasions and the folksy celebration of life.
Like most Indian dance forms, an Odissi troupe performs with the accompaniment of a musical ensemble. The mini-orchestra consists of a number of instruments, often varying slightly by region; the ubiquitous tanpura is used for a consistent, droning ambience throughout, with either the mardala (a barrel drum variant of the pakhavaj), tabla or mridangam for percussion. Melodic instruments range from the harmonium, bansuri (bamboo flute) or sarangi to the sitar and violin. Additionally, manjira (finger cymbals) or other small, percussive instruments may be used. At times, vocalists may be featured, usually singing simple, rhythmic phrases and melodies with dancing specifically choreographed to match.
Styles
The Odissi tradition existed in three schools: Mahari, Nartaki, and Gotipua:
- Maharis were Oriya devadasis or temple girls, their name deriving from Maha (great) and Nari (girl), or Mahri (chosen) particularly those at the temple of Jagganath at Puri. Early Maharis performed Nritta (pure dance) and Abhinaya (interpretation of poetry) dedicated to various Hindu gods and goddesses, as well as Puranic mythologies and Vedic legends. Later, Maharis especially performed dance sequences based on the lyrics of Jayadev's Gita Govinda. This style is more sensuous and closer to the classical Sanskrit texts on dance, music and performance arts.
- Gotipuas were boys dressed up as girls and taught the dance by the Maharis. This style included martial arts, athletics and acrobatics. Gotipuas danced to these compositions outside the temples and fairgrounds as folksy entertainment.
- Nartaki dance took place in the royal courts, where it was prevalent before the British period.
Schools, training and recognition
Odissi maestros and performers
Kelucharan Mohapatra, Pankaj Charan Das, Deba Prasad Das and Raghunath Dutta were the four major gurus who revived Odissi in the late forties and early fifties. Sanjukta Panigrahi was a leading disciple of Kelucharan Mohapatra who popularized Odissi by performing in India and abroad. In the mid-sixties, three other disciples of Kelucharan Mohapatra, Kumkum Mohanty and Sonal Mansingh, were known for their performances in India and abroad. Some other notable disciples include, Debi Basu, Jhelum Paranjape, Shubhada Varadkar, Daksha Mashruwala and Nandita Behera. Laximipriya Mohapatra performed a piece of Odissi abhinaya in the Annapurna Theatre in Cuttack in 1948, a show upheld as the first classical Odissi dance performance after its contemporary revival. Guru Mayadhar Raut played a pivotal role in giving Odissi dance its classical status. He introduced Mudra Vinyoga in 1955 and Sancharibhava in the Odissi dance items, and portrayed Shringara Rasa in Gita Govinda Ashthapadis. His notable compositions include Pashyati Dishi Dishi and Priya Charu Shile, composed in 1961.
Schools
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IIT Bhubaneswar
Odissi has been included in Indian Institute of Technology Bhubaneswar's BTech syllabus since 2015 as the first Indian national technical institute to introduce any classical dance in syllabus.
In Guinness World records
Guinness World Records has acknowledged the feat of the largest congregation of Odissi dancers in a single event. 555 Odissi dancers performed at the event hosted on 23 December 2011, in the Kalinga stadium, Bhubaneswar, Odisha. The dancers performed the mangalacharana, Battu, Pallavi, Abhinaya and Mokshya dance items from the Odissi repertoire.
More than 1000 Odissi dancers performed at the World Cultural Festival 12 March 2016. This is till date the largest congregation of Odissi dancers in a single event.
Odissi Centre at Oxford University
An Odissi dance centre has been opened from January 2016, at the University of Oxford. Known as Oxford Odissi Centre, it is an initiative of the Odissi dancer and choreographer Baisali Mohanty who is also a post-graduate scholar at the University of Oxford.
Beside holding regular Odissi dance classes at its institution, the Oxford Odissi Centre also conducts Odissi dance workshops at other academic institutions in the United Kingdom.
See also
References
- ^ Odissi Encyclopædia Britannica (2013)
- Williams 2004, pp. 83–84, the other major classical Indian dances are: Bharatanatyam, Kathak, Kuchipudi, Kathakali, Manipuri, Chhau, Satriya, Yaksagana and Bhagavata Mela.
- "Guidelines for Sangeet Natak Akademi Ratna and Akademi Puraskar". Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
- Peter J. Claus; Sarah Diamond; Margaret Ann Mills (2003). South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-415-93919-5.
- ^ Sunil Kothari; Avinash Pasricha (1990). Odissi, Indian classical dance art. Marg Publications. pp. 4–6, 41. ISBN 978-81-85026-13-8., Quote: "There are other temples too in Odisha where the maharis used to dance. Besides the temple of Lord Jagannatha, maharis were employed in temples dedicated to Shiva and Shakti."
- ^ James G. Lochtefeld (2002). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: N-Z. The Rosen Publishing Group. pp. 484–485. ISBN 978-0-8239-3180-4.
- Richard Schechner (2010). Between Theater and Anthropology. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 65–66. ISBN 978-0-8122-0092-8.
- ^ Evangelos Kyriakidis (2007). The archaeology of ritual. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California Press. pp. 155–158. ISBN 978-1-931745-48-2.
- Sunil Kothari; Avinash Pasricha (1990). Odissi, Indian classical dance art. Marg Publications. pp. 9–10, 12. ISBN 978-81-85026-13-8., Quote: The art of dance and maasic suffered on account of political instability, the Muslim invasion, the desecration of the temples and the loss of independence, the lack of patronage to both the maharis and the gotipua dancers..."
- Ragini Devi 1990, pp. 47–49.
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Bibliography
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External links
- Odissi solo performance: Nitisha Nanda, Arabhi Pallav, New Delhi 2013
- Odissi group dance: Megh Pallavi, Vancouver 2014
- Maryam Shakiba – Odissi Dance – Manglacharan Ganesh Vandana Pushkar 2014
- Odissi links Archived 18 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine at the Open Directory
- Odissi schools, Classical Indian Dance Portal
- The annotated Odissi Dance Archive on Pad.ma
- History of Odissi and Geeta Govinda JN Dhar, Orissa Review
- Bharat Bhavan, a Kerala-based Department of Culture information website.
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