Accidental Blogger

A general interest blog

During my recent trip to India, I was able to visit two art / history museums of interest. One was Tagore's ancestral home in the Jorasanko (Twin Bridges) area of Kolkata, the place of the poet's birth as well as his death. The other was the wonderful National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi which I had last seen many, many decades ago. A third equally delightful encounter did not include a museum but it too was tangentially related to art and history, albeit of a more personal nature.

During my yearly trips to New Delhi I mostly spend time with family. If time permits and contact information is available, I also try to meet up with old school and college friends. Most of my friends are scattered over India and the world. Some of us have renewed connection virtually, thanks to Facebook. But real world, face to face meetings are few and far between. This time, due to the efforts of a dear friend with whom I have been in fairly regular touch over the years, I was able to meet two other very good school friends whom I had not seen for some forty years. When we came together, we were able to take up from where we had left without missing a beat. The four of us met for a leisurely lunch in a lovely restaurant in New Delhi's Khan Market. The meal lasted for nearly four hours.  There was much to talk about the intervening years but mostly we talked about our boisterous teenage days. Reminiscences of  school, our teachers and friends, came fast and furious. Seated in the middle of the restaurant, our loud laughter and conversation attracted the attention of other customers and the restaurant staff, I am sure. But we kept ordering food, so no one asked us to leave. Needless to say, we had a fabulous time.

One of the friends at the meeting was Madhavi Mudgal. A science student like me in school, after a short stint as a student of architecture in college, Madhavi chose a career in classical dance and went on to become an Odissi dancer and teacher of considerable repute. Ever since I had known Madhavi, she was a talented dancer. But when I knew her, she was learning and performing Kathak and Bharat Natyam. That she successfully changed over to yet another classical dance tradition later in life is not surprising for an artist as gifted and disciplined as Madhavi. Here is more on her background and accomplishments. (And yes, she is still dancing and performing publicly.)

Madhavi-2 

Madhavi Mudgal epitomizes the elegance and sophistication that are the result of blending modern sensibilities with the ancient ethos of eastern India to create the highly lyrical dance art of Odissi. Born into a family deeply involved in propagating the classical arts, Madhavi was immersed in music and dance from a very young age. With every opportunity to learn the arts, Madhavi trained in Bharata Natyam and Kathak under great gurus and performed these dance styles to acclaim.

Later she turned to Odissi which she adopted as her preferred medium. Her introduction to Odissi took place under Guru Hare Krishna Bahera who trained her in the fundamentals. Later she came under the tutelage of the renowned Guru Kelucharan Mahapatra.

Madhavi's command over the nritta or purely ornamental aspect of Odissi is striking. Her delicate postures and strong rhythmic footwork combine in an appealing flow of sculpturesque movements. Her subtle abhinaya (the expressional aspect of dance), musical knowledge and aesthetic sense add to the highly distinctive character of her recitals.

Through teaching, performing and conducting workshops, Madhavi has been actively involved in propagating the art of Odissi in New Delhi and other parts of India as well as the world. She has trained a number of accomplished students who are performers in their own right. In nineteen eighty five she organized a seminar and festival, Angahaar, a first of its kind event in New Delhi when gurus, scholars and dancers met to revisit the origins of Odissi and think about the future trends of the dance form. She also directed and produced a short audio-visual documentary that was screened at the festival.

Madhavi's father, the late Professor Vinay Chandra Maudgalya was the founder of the famous Gandharva Mahavidyalaya, New Delhi's first and most highly reputed institution for the teaching of Hindustani music and classical dance. Madhavi has been teaching Odissi at this institute for many years.

For her contribution to the art, Madhavi Mudgal received the Sanskriti Award and the President of India's award, the Padmashri besides the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award for her contribution to the world of Indian Dance.

Madhavi will be in Washington D.C. next March to participate in the Maximum India festival at the Kennedy Center. Let me see if I can make it there to see my friend dance after a gap of many, many years. Meanwhile here are a couple of video links to Madhavi's performances, one solo and the other with a group of dancers.

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9 responses to “Madhavi Mudgal: Dancer, Teacher, Friend”

  1. Mandira

    I last saw Madhavi and her students dance at a charity event organised by the alumni association of the school. I also remember the times when I saw her practicing kathak with her guruji the late Pandit Durga Lal.Try making it to her show in March.

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  2. I know very little of Odissi, beyond watching the occasional performance on Doordarshan when they still had the good concerts and dances and were overcome by the flurry of film based programming that is the staple of the airwaves these days. I have watched Sanjukta Panigrahi, but not seen Madhavi Mudgal’s performances. The amount of work that goes into every graceful, elongated movement is amazing-even if I find the lack of speedy footwork a little cloying, after a while, probably because I’m more accustomed to the faster pacing and showy footwork in Bharatanatyam.
    In this video, Madhavi is performing side by side with Alarmel Valli- the differences between styles are well delineated. But what stands out is Madhavi’s inner focus.The audience is incidental to the performance. Alarmel Valli’s is a more extroverted, audience-conscious performance, and while it pleases directly, doesn’t have the same clean lines and serenity as Madhavi’s movements.
    Link

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  3. Mandira,
    Perhaps you were too young at the time but during my middle and high school years, the dance part of any cultural function always included Manipuri or Bengali folk dance based group performances under the guidance of Mr. Sinha, the music teacher and a Kathak piece by the trio of Madhavi, Raka Chakravarty and Asha Sarin. The latter three were all students at the Gandharva Mahavidyalay and they composed and choreographed their own numbers usually led by Madhavi.
    Sujatha,
    I had also found the video of the duet of Madhavi and Alarmel Valli. Beautiful. But I didn’t post it because the clip is just about 20 seconds long. It is interesting that you brought up Sanjukta Panigrahi whose amazing grace and talent played a part in a very personal choice in my life. I had planned to name my daughter “Aditi” initially. But after I saw a performance by Panigrahi, I picked Sanjukta partly because of the danseuse’s charm and also, because of the name’s meaning – “integration.”

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  4. Elatia Harris

    How moving and lovely, Ruchira. A grand reunion for you all — I can just imagine the emotions of which you did not speak. I got a glimpse of classical Indian dance as my friend Lakshmi’s daughter, Sonali, studied it for 9 years, giving an Arangetram at the end, the spring before she went off to Yale. I understood that the Arangetram was both the culmination of the first phase of study, and the beginning, if the dancer chose it, of professional involvement accompanied by a lifetime of intensive study. In Sonali’s case, it was the final performance — she was bound for physics not for dance, but an astonishing dancer who gave form to aspects of dance I had never known about, despite slight acquaintance through clips. Her guru had written an essay to help the 1200 people in the audience, mainly friends and family, understand what was going on in the program in some detail. Little did we know that Lakshmi had been taking time from her business as a statistician for studying dance during those 9 years, too — she wanted this to the the mother-daughter thing she and Sonali would have forever, not to mention the deep connection to India that it helped to maintain. It was an immersion for an afternoon in an infinitely unfolding aesthetic, and a celebration of a unique mother-daughter bond.

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  5. Dean C. Rowan

    How I wish I could get to DC in March! Just three days ago I made a purchase at a local record store of an assortment of Indian musical recitals, both Hindustani and Carnatic. And now this introduction to dance and one of its splendid proponents! Thank you, Ruchira.

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  6. I usually get to see a couple of arangetrams (only Bharatanatyam), since that is the main Indian dance form here in the Pittsburgh area. We get only occasional glimpses of other classical dance forms, though there are schools dedicated to Kathak, folk dances. My daughter attends one where folk and Nabanritya are taught as well, with workshops on Chau, Manipuri in the recent years. My daughter is enlisted in the Bharatanatyam classes, but is exposed to other types of dance as well, which might make for a purist complaining that one ends up being a Jack/Jill of all trades and master of none, but we aren’t that addicted to purity over the fun factor.
    Of the last couple of Arangetrams that I saw, the first was remarkable for the purist tack- the teacher doesn’t allow much stage exposure for her pre-Arangetram students, which can result in interesting ‘first performances’. She was a good dancer, but the nervousness shone through. The last one was by a girl used to being on stage, having danced in any number of dance productions. A ‘freshness’ factor may have been lacking, but she tackled more complicated pieces with an inner focus on the dance and inattention to audience that was very impressive. I think I enjoyed the second more than the first.

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  7. Anna Levine

    The style of dance is literally statuesque– like watching a statue come to life. Very elegant. And Madhavi has such a engagingly expressive face. Thank you for this interesting post on something about which I confess I know absolutely nothing. It sounds like you had an enjoyable and rewarding trip.

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  8. Andrew R.

    Wow, sounds like an amazing trip. I will definitely make a note to learn more about Odissi.

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  9. can well imagine the scene in the restaurant. and i have known that it gives a strange feeling of confidence and a sense of reassurance in the goodness of human nature when a friend who has grown into a celebrity is still the same old friend!

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