Thursday, January 28, 2010
i'm the catcher in the rye...
Monday, January 25, 2010
Colour Tandava!
Colour Tandava- an exhibition on Colour Concepts in South India. We researched, conceptualised and created the exhibition which was on for a month from 23rd December, 2009 till 20th January, 2010. It was an absolute fun journey right through. We are proud to have Good Earth from Bangalore as our sponsors for the same.
‘Balance’ in our daily lives, in temples and rituals, in performing arts, in streetscapes and living spaces, and finally, in our contemporary lifestyle and media...Colours say it all...
Dance Drama forms of South India present an extremely vibrant show of colours. The costume and make up in all these cases are not purely for visual appeal but also play an important role in determining the nature of the character.
Characters are generally classified according to their temperament which is dominated by one particular sentiment or Rasa. As per the Natya Sastra, there are 8 Rasas – each of which has been represented by a colour.
The Ashtadikpalakas are the guardians of the 8 directions.

The Matrtanta explains that the three inner qualities or triguna- Sattva(Intelligence or Brilliance), Rajas (action), and Tamas( inertia or darkness) are also represented by the same three colours White, Red and Black.
These two colours together represent Prakriti and Purusha, the two all important concepts in the Universe. Red and White in tandem with each other represent creation through the union of Purusha (white, the male principle) and Prakriti/ Shakti (red, the female principle).
Mamallapuram
One of the best here... Arjuna's penance panel. It is a great riddle in stone at Mamallapuram. Some say it is Arjuna’s penance, others contend it is Bhagiratha’s penance and some others believe the panel has scenes of Naga worship. It is wonderful how the same panel could be depicting one of two very prominent scenes from the epics- Arjuna doing penance to Shiva for the pashupata astra or Bhagirata doing penance to get Ganga to descend on to earth and Shiva coming down to help him Ganga descend onto his knotted locks and then to earth. The most beautiful aspect is the natural cleft in the rock panel that is used to depict the water body in the scene. When it rains, it must be beautiful to see water gushing down this cleft, bringing this whole scene alive.

The Pancha Pandava Rathas: Firstly, the nomenclature here is misleading as the monolithic structures have nothing to do with the panchapandavas and these so called rathas do not have wheels as well. Leaving the name aside, these are a set of 5 monolithic temples, where a huge rock has been chiselled into four cuts thus arriving into 4 pieces, the bottom is the same. The pieces are named as ‘the Draupadi ratha’, ‘the Arjuna ratha’, ‘the Bhima ratha’, ‘the Dharmaraja ratha’ and a separate one called ‘the Nakulasahadeva ratha’.

Poetry in stones, these sculptures and architectural wonders make a visit to Mamallapuram totally worth it. There are more interesting temples and panels here, but these are my favourites, so that all you get here. :)