Dance is an outward expression of deep inner
feelings.
The tradition of the performing arts in India has its roots in the Vedas
in which ritual manifested itself through music and dance. Dance is perhaps
one of the earliest fine arts evolved by mankind and considered as part of
the religion as the first dance performed is believed to be the cosmic dance
of Shiva at the creation of the universe. The belief is that dancing came
into being at the beginning of all things. The Indian mind having traversed
all regions of knowledge surrender to the bliss of Dance of Shiva who plays,
longs and creates. Blinded by the beauty, he rushes frolics, dances and whirls.
Lord Shiva is Natraja, Lord of Dances, the cosmos is his theater-he himself
is actor and audience. The figure of Natraja is adorned as the prime source
of Indian dance.
The Natyashastra, an ancient treatise on dramaturgy, explains that when the
written texts became the monopoly of the educated few the sods appealed to
Lord Bramha, the creator, and urged him to promulgate a fifth Veda, in the
form of audiovisual art that would be accessible to all irrespective of caste
or formal education. Thus the natya Veda was conceived drawing contents and
teachings from the four Vedas and presenting the quintessence of all five
arts including music, painting and dance.
In India religion, philosophy and mythology cannot be divorced from their
art forms. Dance and music arc tied inextricably to ceremony of any kind-wedding,
birth, coronation, religious procession-all are occasions for singing and
dancing.
The three main divisions in the classical form of dancing are
:
» Nritta or Pure dance which is performed with attractive movements of
the body.
» Nritya - Conveys the meaning of the song by means of Abhinaya or Face
movements, Hast mudra or hand gestures.
» Natya means drama where hand and facial gestures are added in the enactment
of drama-combination of both-acting and dancing.