The Asian Age

ENHANCING ART THROUGH VISION

- Sandip Soparrkar is a world-renowned ballroom dancer and a Bollywood choreograp­her who has been honoured with National Achievemen­t Award and National Excellence Award by the Govt of India. He can be contacted on sandipsopa­rrkar06@gmail.com Sandip Soparrka

There are some dancers who always enchant and mesmerise the audience with not only their perfected moves but also their divine beauty.

When a dancer plays the role or showcases the character of a Goddess, just looking at her the audience feel that the Devi would actually look just the way she did on stage, and it means that the dancer actually gave us a live darshan of the Goddess.

There is one such dancer who does just that. I am talking about the stunning Padma Shri Geeta Chandran. She is a celebrated artiset and star performer, whose name is synonymous with Bharatnaty­am.

Recently called the “hottest dancer” of the capital in a survey by a renowned publicatio­n, this Saraswati Puruskar awardee started learning Bharatnaty­am from the tender age of five under the guidance of her guru, Swarna Saraswathy who hailed from the traditiona­l Thanjavoor Devadasi Parampara.

Geetaji is one artiste who not only uses what she has learnt under the guru shisya parampara but also enhances her art even more by using personal vision of dance in her performanc­es.

In her shows and presentati­ons she weaves abstract notions of joy, beauty, values, aspiration, myths and spirituali­ty. She is celebrated for her deep and composite understand­ing of the art of Bharatnaty­am and her Carnatic music — she is trained and accomplish­ed vocalist.

Her work in television, video, film, theatre, choreograp­hy, dance education, dance activism and dance issue journalism has been greatly appreciate­d. No wonder an artiste like her has been given the title of ‘Outstandin­g Artist’ by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR).

I feel honoured to inform you that the elegant Geetaji and me have one thing in common: we are both recipients of the National Excellence Award, the only difference is she was given this honour in 2008 and I in 2016. Natya Vriksha, an organisati­on founded by her, enshrines the best philosophi­es of Indian classical culture.

At her institute she not only teaches practical dancing and its theory but also imparts knowledge of related fields like music, aharya (costuming and make-up), stage design and sound and light technology. Tamil and Telugu are mostly used in Bharatnaty­am, and this language is alien to most of the students coming to Natya Vriksha. It is an uphill task to make them understand the nuances of these languages.

Geetaji takes special care and interest in imparting the meaning and ideas underlying the lyrics her disciples learn. She also familiaris­es her students with our ancient epics, legends and mythology, which form the foundation of the Indian classical dance experience.

Recently Natya Vriksha celebrated twenty-five glorious years with a show that mesmerised one and all. The show was aptly called Anekanta and was rooted in Jain philosophy, Anekanta recognises that there are multiple realities to every issue. The show celebrates acceptance of multiple truths, embracing diversity and of universal acceptance, portrayed through Bharatnaty­am.

The performanc­es were all guided by the intellectu­al inputs from scholaraut­hor Sudhamahi Regunathan, who is a renowned Jain scholar. In her solo performanc­e, Geetaji examined shades of Anekanta through choreograp­hy that explored the relationsh­ip of the word and meaning of many avataras; of many bhavas to a single text; of Ravana who gets mesmerised by every single aspect of Sita’s body and wonders if such is the power of each part, what would be the impact of the whole? And of Saint Tyagaraja who presents the cosmic view of interrelat­edness of existence. In the group dances, Geetaji viewed Anekanta through dramatic dance strategies like Alarippu presented in three speeds; of exploring grihabheda in movement; finding linkages between sounds and silence, of the many roopas of Devi, and of a little known viswaroopa of Vishnu that Arjuna encounters in the forests of Orissa and realises that the Navagunjar­a’s parts add up to the whole!

The music for this

breathtaki­ng production was designed by Geetaji in close collaborat­ion with K. Venkateshw­aran and Dr. S. Vasudevan. The lyrical music-space was further enhanced with rhythmic inputs by K. Sivakumar and Lalgudi Sri Ganesh adding verve and vibrancy to the show and was supported by a stellar crew of artistes. Sandhya Raman designed the vibrant costumes, Manish Kansara conceptual­ised the stage design and Sharad Kulshresht­ha did the dramatic and very effective light design.

Anekanta aspires to bring valuable oxygen to the larger public discourse on identity. It is a powerful artistic statement of Natya Ratna Geetaji, who has moved tradition forward with her strategic performanc­es.

After the performanc­e, I asked Geetaji how she felt completing 25 years of teaching dance to people of all ages. The articulate dancer replied, “Sandip, teaching first generation learners with almost no background in Indian culture, has not only been a challenge but also a great learning process for me. Teaching means constant upgrading and unlearning at the same time. Students are constantly evolving and every few years one notices how they approach dance with different skill baskets.

One has to be aware of these realities while crafting the pedagogy. Also teaching has to be wideangled, giving the students scope to explore all aspects of dance. Today, teaching can no longer be geared to creating performers alone. At Natya Vriksha, I try to create dancers plus!”

Geetaji is a rare combinatio­n a luminary and a visionary, who is a widely respected role model for the young generation. She guides reputed national cultural institutio­ns and prestigiou­s universiti­es as their board member, and also serves on the advisory boards of several reputed schools and colleges all over India. Arts education is another of her impassione­d commitment­s and she is an advocate for incrementa­l arts education supporting both government and private initiative­s to achieve a higher level of arts learning as part of formal education.

In her effort to “endance the universe”, she engages in a strategic range of dance-related activities: Performing, teaching, conducting, singing, collaborat­ing, organising, writing and speaking to young audiences.

She is an artiste we all love and respect a lot, not only because she is beautiful and highly gifted and talented dancer but also because she has unconditio­nally given her life to educate youth with the finer nuances of dance and all the issues and subjects related to it. She is a guru, a mentor and a guide in the very true sense, who enriches the lives of every person who associates with her in anyway.

I salute the dedication, perseveran­ce and determinat­ion of Geeta Chandran with a heartfelt pranam!

 ??  ?? The music for Natya Vriksha’s show, Anekanta, was designed by Geeta Chandran in collaborat­ion with K. Venkateswa­ran and Dr. S. Vasudevan.
Recently called the ‘hottest dancer’ of the capital in a survey by a renowned publicatio­n, this Saraswati...
The music for Natya Vriksha’s show, Anekanta, was designed by Geeta Chandran in collaborat­ion with K. Venkateswa­ran and Dr. S. Vasudevan. Recently called the ‘hottest dancer’ of the capital in a survey by a renowned publicatio­n, this Saraswati...
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