Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Surupa Sen and Bijayini Satpathy - Thursday 6th @ 19.30


They will dance :

samyoga: Odissi duet by Surupa Sen and Bijayini Satpathy
 
‘samyoga’ meaning combination; union; synthesis; conjunction of two or more heavenly bodies, symbolises the symbiotic combination of Surupa Sen and Bijayini Satpathy, quite unlike any in the artistic world.  Living and working together for the past 20 years in Nrityagram, art sourced from within and outside of themselves, each brings her unique knowledge and qualities to the dance.
 
‘samyoga’ is the outcome of years expended in finding the perfect balance. Of art and craft. Of strength and grace. Of technique and spirit. Confidence and vulnerability. Of a male godhead and his essential feminine divine.  In search of the essence of Odissi, they dance together- compliment each other and free themselves of enforced boundaries.
 
‘samyoga’ commences with Narayana Namah, verses by Shri Annamacharya sung in praise of Lord Vishnu performed by Surupa Sen.  This will be followed by Rati Shringar Pallavi set to Raga Desh performed by Surupa Sen and Bijayini Satpathy. A submission to the inherently lyrical form of Odissi, this composition explores the various dimensions of its abstract vocabulary.
 
Several abhinaya compositions follow by way of  ashtapadis from the Geeta Govinda.  Written in Sanskrit in the 12th century by the poet saint Jayadeva, the Gita Govinda is a romantic ballad about the immortal love of Radha and Krishna. It is a song of love and longing that reflects the Vaishnava belief that all humankind is feminine energy (Radha) constantly seeking union with the one male godhead (Krishna). 
 
Surupa Sen depicts the Khandita nayika in the ashtapadi ‘Yahi Madhava, Yahi Keshava’.  Krishna has promised to meet Radha in the forest grove. Radha waits all night long but Krishna does not come. Now it is dawn and Krishna arrives with signs of having been with another woman.  Enraged, Radha says,
“Go away Krishna!
Speak not these lies to me;
return to her; for she will quench your passion and give you joy.
Why do you come to me now?”
 
‘Priye Charusheele’  performed by Bijayini Satpathy describes a repentant Krishna who returns to Radha after being separated.  Krishna beseeches Radha to abandon her baseless pride and expresses his longing for her.  “You are my adornment, my breath, the most precious gem in the ocean of life.  Nourish my heart, Krishna implores and pleads of Radha to place her tender feet upon his head and quell his burning desire.
Beloved mine,
abandon this baseless pride.
Let me kiss your lotus face,
oh beautiful one
and appease the fire in my heart.
 
Your slightest word,
like a moonbeam,
dispels the darkness of my heart.
 
Like the Chakora bird
waiting for the moon,
my longing eyes,
transfix
to your glowing face.
 
You are my adornment
my breath
the most precious gem
in the ocean of life
Nourish my heart, I beseech you
 
Place your tender lotus feet upon my head
and quell this burning fire,
Beloved mine.
 
The concluding choreography Vibhakta performed by Surupa Sen and Bijayini Satpathy, explores the secret of all creation which is in the union and the separation of the male and female principle.  It is believed that creation begins when, with the power of yoga, the ONE splits into two and becomes Ardhanarishvara (half-man half-woman). In this form both halves live in perfect symphony - at once distinct and separate as well as harmonious and blended. Each acknowledges and celebrates the existence of the other.
 
“Her body is the colour of a champa blossom,
his is like camphor;
her body is sprinkled with musk-vermillion powder,
his is smeared with the ash of funeral-pyres;
she is adorned with anklets and bracelets of gold,
he wears a multitude of glistening snakes;
she wears a garland of mandaara flowers,
he wears a garland of skulls;
she is draped in silks,
he is clad by the sky;
her hair is dark like the monsoon clouds,
his matted locks flash with lightening.
Her dance creates the universe.
His Tandava dissolves everything.
I bow to the mother of the universe.
I bow to the father of the universe.
Om namah Shivah.
Om namah Shiva.”
(Ardhanarishvara Stotram attributed to Shri Adi Shankara)
 
Ardhanarishvara Stotram is a hymn sung by a devotee which has been interpreted as a poem, where Shiva the male principle, sings his adoration to his beloved other half. And Shivah, the female aspect, describes the glory of her magnificent counterpart.  It becomes at once, a love song and a celebration of the ‘duality’ of the human spirit.

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