
Kruti Dance Academy explores Shringara rasa at its annual
recital
By
Kavita Chhibber
Photos: Vinod Devlia
It began three years ago with her 10th annual recital at the Fox
Theater. A flight to fantasy, was followed by Kalakar-the true
artist last year. On 27th May 2007, Dina Sheth’s Kruti Dance
Academy concluded the trilogy with the exploration of Shringara
rasa through the magic of Geet Govind. Geet Govind is the famous
epic poem, written by Jayadev in the 12th century depicting the
love between Radha and Krishna. The classical dance segment was
choreographed to capture the nuances of the epic. The beginning
with little kids chanting beautiful mantras to perhaps evoke all
that is divine and blissful within all of us, set the stage for
a beautiful presentation by students who had spent many months
perfecting their foot work, adding more grace to their
movements. Two big screens aided the presentation on stage,
where the audience could get a close-up of the colorful
costumes, footwork and bhava mudras of the dancers

Kamlesh Dwivedi who is a scholar helped Dina Sheth understand
the epic in greater depth which in turn helped her translate it
to her students with greater ease and also create the
choreography around it. “ Geet Govind had been my favorite when
I was learning dance and I wanted to also bring Pandit Jasraj’s
rendition to the forefront, “ said Dina.
According To Kamlesh Dwivedi, Jayadev had been greatly
influenced by the devotional environment and Guru Nanak’s visit
when he wrote Geet Govind. “ Geet Govind is the best known
composition of Jayadev and perhaps the finest example of
shringar, the literary description of the decoration of the
body, mind and the soul-tan, man and atma in Sanskrit,” says
Dwivedi.
That shringara of tan, man and atma was aptly portrayed in 12
segments of beautiful dances, color and bhava by students from
the youngest, to the senior students of the Academy. Rachana,
Pushpanjali, Sur, Gagan Gheere, Lalit Lavanga, Mand Samiran, Ja
Ja Madhava, Natwar Nagar, Mat Kar Kanha, Ras Rasik, and Radha
Mohan captured the nuances of shringara bringing 12th century
India, Jayadev’s Jaggannath Puri, and the evolving love between
Radha and Krishna to the audience in all its glory.
The second segment showcased Shringara in its carefree, joyful
state through Bollywood songs. Boys and girls from different age
groups performing Bollywood hits like the Himesh Reshammiya
medley, Barso re from Guru, Dhoom, Soneya, Rock n Roll, Where’s
the Party Tonight, Asmani Chatri, Cheena re Cheena and the grand
finale a 5 part dazzler was performed by The Kruti Alumni,
volunteers, staff and the current arangetram class and Dina
herself.
Just as it was last year, all the dancers were immaculately
dressed-the eye for detail, be it the outfits, or the jewelry or
the meticulous way the stage was set was as professional as any
top notch show you could see anywhere. It also spilled into the
performance, the dance steps and even the way each segment
ended. The music varied from classical to fusion to plain
Bollywood as kids of all age groups put up a finely tuned
segment each time, with beauty and grace. The entire performance
was a wonderful improvisation of the classical and the modern
while remaining true to the focus of paying tribute to the young
artists through their art
Perhaps the best dancer to graduate out of Kruti, is Shimoni
Sheth, Dina’s daughter. She has a natural inborn talent,
elegance and light movements and is a delight to watch. She did
a good job of emceeing the event as well.

Many students shared what shringara meant to them, both on stage
and in writing. Some said shringara implied dance because it
embodies a mind, body, soul connection, another said that
keeping the body healthy, cultivating good qualities like
compassion, perseverance, and commitment would make the person a
pure vehicle to offer shringar to Lord Krishna. The masters of
Shringara realized the presence of beauty where ever you chose
to find it and to find that godliness within you can make
shringara truly divine.
The presentation was as immaculate as it always is, the stage
decorated beautiful with diyas and lovely curtain with flowing
drapes. All the costumes were coordinated beautifully
The highlight of the evening was the presence of flute maestro
Deepak Ram, who enhanced the mood of Geet Govind by playing a
short segment on the flute, which had always enchanted Radha and
became the highlight of the evening. Ram a senior disciple of Pt
Hariprasad Chaurasia, was deeply appreciative of the effort put
in by Dina and her students. He said, "While watching the annual
recital of Kruti Dance Company, I was reminded of something I
read many years ago. The great Lebanese Poet Kahlil Gibran said
of dance,
'The philosophers’ soul dwells in the head, the artists’ soul in
the eyes, but the dancers’ soul pervades the whole body'. The
splendid choreography and the discipline with which
it was executed was simply delightful, every nuance of gesture,
expression was a joy to watch.
Dinaji will never be able predict as to when her contribution to
her students and society will cease to be. Her students will not
only experience the sheer joy and beauty of art, but it will
influence many other areas of their lives in a very very
positive way.”
|