Indira Kadambi’s ‘Koham’ stands out for its choreography and concept
The Hindu
Koham unfolds Vedantic concepts through well-designed music and movement
Indira Kadambi’s latest choreography, Koham, spelt sophistication from start to finish. It integrated highest spiritual thought with the mundane through well-designed music and a tight movement script.
A bold concept, the production was put forth by Indira and her senior student Meera Sreenarayanan based on the abstract Mahavakyams from the Upanishads for the Natyavamsham series. These online programmes curated by Rama Vaidyanathan, focus on the guru-sishya synergies and are presented by the GVRNK Foundation to celebrate 10 years of its annual festival, ‘Margazhi’, in Mumbai.
In Advaita Vedanta, there is a Neti Neti concept that negates all that is unreal — the body, the mind, the senses, the world etc. The subsequent question is usually ‘Koham’, (then) who am I? This was a challenging concept for a visual art form. With the help of clear thinking and enough experts — voice overs (Praveen D. Rao), a melodious, tailored musical score (T.V. Ramprasadh, Praveen D.Rao), evocative lighting and camera work (Jose Koshi, Prajeesh Bhaskar) and editing (Tanvy Shah, Meera), they explained the concept through the three states of consciousness — Jagrat (awakened), Svapna (dream) and Sushupti (deep sleep), rephrasing them as The Dance of Bodies, The Dance of Minds and The Dance of Consciousness.
The Dance of the Bodies (Indira, Apeksha Kamath) dealt with the beginning of creation. Silence was filled with the recitation of the Maheshwara sutras, as the entwined causal body disengages and forms the five elements, picturised with mime and aerial shots of the shape that the element carries. As the creation evolved, so did the music. From syllables, it moved to swaras and into a melody (Karaharapriya, the first raga in Carnatic music) as pancha bhoothas evolved into animals and specifically into homo sapiens, with Indira miming the evolution of the two-legged man.
The dancers enjoyed movement, and they broke into nadai-based steps in a Mohanam jatiswaram. The questioning begins — ‘I am dancing, but what is dance? What is the purpose of my dance? … He is the purpose, He is the action…the dance…’
The ‘He’, Shiva, was introduced in the Thodi padavarnam, ‘Adi Shivanaik kaanave asai kondenadi’ (Dhandayuthapani Pillai, Adi) where the heroine is yearning to see Shiva. The lilting Dhandayuthapani jathis rendered by the calm baritone (Praveen Kumar) was as melodious as the music.
Having established the God, the search continued. Is he the eternal supreme being? Is he the dance? The guru walks away leaving the sishya to her thoughts.
nyone trying to slot Hong Kong filmmaker Ann Hui into a particular genre will be at a loss, for all through her 45 year-long career, she has moved easily between varied spaces, from independent cinema to the mainstream, from personal films to a bit of action too. For that matter, she has made a horror film too. Ask her about it and the 77-year old, who was conferred with the 29th International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK)‘s Lifetime achievement award, says with disarming candour that she was just trying to see what she was good at.