Antiquated Nataraja
Icons
depicting Shiva as the Lord of Dance (Nataraja) seem to have originated
in the North in Gupta times, and developed in the South under the
post-Gupta Vishnukundin dynasty early in the seventh century. One
of the first southern sculptures is a colossal dancing figure carved
upon the cliff face above the facade of a cave- temple at Mogallarajapuram
on the Krishna river. The Pallavas took up the theme and developed
it throughout the succeeding two centuries until, in the tenth century,
the Cholas perfected in bronze the form which is the precursor to
the present image.
To place this icon-type in its context,
it is just one of several images, such as the Dakshinamurtis,
which depict Shiva-Mahaguru in one of his teaching roles; in this
case, as teacher of the classical dance which originated as a
magnificent form of worship in temples. The architects and sculptors
of the temple having been required to study music and the dance,
the sacred building comes to life when the dances are staged,
the performers, whose lives are dedicated to the god, being dressed
to resemble the deities, demons and heroes of mythology. The god
is entertained, his temple resounding with precise rhythms; the
dancers themselves, trained from childhood in the strict discipline
of their art, may attain a state of ecstasy; and the observers
see the gods acting out their timeless dramas in the magical medium
of the sacred ballet which recreates the supernatural world of
myth.
The Nataraja icon presents the dancer in a pose which is technically
termed bhujanga-trasa, 'fear of a snake', since the body is twisted
violently to the side, one leg raised abruptly as if the foot had
just trodden upon a snake. The left arm sweeping across the body
is also a purely artistic movement from the dance. In the upper
right hand, is the damaru drum - a double-faced instrument held
in the middle at the narrow waist. When the drum is shaken with
a vigorous rocking motion, the thongs fly out and the knots or weights
lash the stretched skin of the drum faces, producing a rapid, staccato
tattoo: the original meaning of the word damaru is a tumultuous
clamor or uproar. As for the rest, the icon is wholly didactic,
a superb symbol of the divine forces which demand utter self surrender
on the part of the individual, presented in ritualized artistic
terms which engage the mind of the devotee as compellingly as does
the temple-dance itself. This is the four-armed Nataraja image as
it is best known; Shiva as the destroyer of ignorance, pattern of
the cosmos and guide to liberation.
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