Archive for the 'Konark Festival' Category

The music, dance and craft festivals in and around Bhubaneswar during Nov 2011 – Feb 2012

Bhubaneswar- Cuttack- Puri, Ekamra Utsav, Bhubaneswar, Festivals, Gotipua Festival, Kalinga Mahotsav, Dhauli, Konark Festival, Odisha govt. action, Raja Rani music festival Comments Off on The music, dance and craft festivals in and around Bhubaneswar during Nov 2011 – Feb 2012

Following is a list with some links. Please let me know if I am missing something.

  1. Gotipua Dance Festival, (15th-17th November 2011).
  2. Puri Beach Festival (23rd – 29th November 2011).
  3. Konark Festival (1st – 5th December 2011).
  4. International Sand art Festival (1st-5th December 2011).
  5. Dhauli Kalinga Mahotsav (10th – 14th December 2011).
    1. Dhauli Mahotsav (10th-12th December 2011)
    2. Kalinga Mahotsav (13th-14th December 2011)
  6. Shreekhetra Utsav, Puri  (14th-25th December 2011) ???
  7. Toshali National Crafts Mela (15th – 27th December 2011).
  8. Odissi International (18th-22nd December 2011).
  9. Eastern Jatra Festival (24th – 30th December).
  10. International Odissi Dance Festival (23rd-30th December 2011).
  11. Odissi Music Festival (8th – 10th January 2012).
  12. Ekamra – the Temple City Festival (10th-20th January 2012)
    1. Mukteswar Dance Festival (14th – 16th January 2012).
    2. Rajarani Music Festival (18th – 20th January 2012).
  13. Adivasi Mela (26th January – 5th February 2012).
  14. Kharavela Mahotsava (30th January – 5th February 2012).
  15. Konark dance and music festival (19-23rd February 2012).
  16. BYOF (Bring Your Own Film) -21st -25th February 2012.
  17. Drama Season in Bhubaneswar: February – April.
  18. Samrachana: Choreography Festival (1st March to 5th March 2012).

This year some of the festivals are new. They are: Gotipua festival, Sand art festival and the Odissi music festival. All of them are great additions. 

In the future years perhaps additional festivals that would include Pala/Daskathia, Sambalpuri music, Sambalpuri dance, Chhau dance, Ghumura etc. can be included. Chhau and Ghumura may be part of the adivasi mela, but giving them a solo dance or music platform (not part of a mela) would be great.

Debabrata Mohanty pays tribute to Guru Gangadahara Pradhan in Indian Express

Konark Festival, Odisha Culture, Odisha personalities, Odissi 1 Comment »

Following is from http://www.indianexpress.com/news/end-of-a-dance-odyssey/698852/0.


Had it not been for his parents, Gangadhar Pradhan, renowned exponent of Odissi, who died at a private hospital in Bhubaneswar last Monday, would perhaps never have chosen the dance form. Moments after he was born at Parikul, a remote village of Puri district in 1948, Gangadhar did not cry, leading to fears that he may be stillborn. Gangadhar’s peasant father, Muralidhar Pradhan, and mother, Dwitika Devi, had already lost their three sons and two daughters earlier. Muralidhar vowed that if this child survived, he would serve the presiding deity, Lord Balunkeshwar, at Dimirisena village in Puri district, for five years.

Gangadhar survived, and at the age of six years he was sent to the temple at Dimirisena, where he went through a rigorous training in Gotipua (literally meaning one boy) dance, under the direct guidance of Pandit Chandrasekhar Pattnaik.

If the late Kelucharan Mohapatra made Odissi popular to the outside world, Gangadhar, one of his first disciples, was instrumental in carrying the dance form forward and giving it institutional support. A purist to the core like his guru, Gangadhar honed his skill at playing the mardal (a percussion instrument) by learning from Singhari Shyama Sundar Kar and Guru Banamali Maharana. He learnt the text of Odissi dance from well-known scholar Dhirendra Nath Patnaik. His alma mater, Utkal Sangeet Mahavidyalaya, also played a significant role in shaping Gangadhar, who matured into a dancer-choreographer of great sensitivity and skill.

Gangadhar was the proverbial sculptor, hammering away day and night to keep the dance form robust and popular. “As a teacher, he never ran away from Odissi’s pure traditions. He was always grammatically correct and would not do anything that messed up the basic fabric of the dance form,” said noted danseuse Kumkum Mohanty.

While Kelucharan crafted his own style, Gangadhar did not follow any particular style. But it was his vision to establish Odissi as a strong art form that distinguished him from other Odissi legends.

In the late ’70s, the life of a performing artist, particularly that of a dancer, was difficult to say the least. But instead of giving up, Gangadhar came up with the idea of starting an institution. In 1975, he started the Odissi Dance Academy, later re-christened as the Orissa Dance Academy (ODA).

The academy in Bhubaneswar is the single biggest repository of Odissi dance talent, having produced over 1,000 renowned dancers so far. “In the world of Odissi, you pick any known dancer today and chances are that he/she would be a product of the ODA,” says dance critic Shyamahari Chakra. Not surprisingly, there are 35 Odissi dance schools in the world affiliated to the ODA. But his unceremonious exit a few years ago hurt him badly.

Always on the lookout for ways to popularise Odissi, Gangadhar hit upon the idea of expanding its reach through festivals. One thing that always bothered him was that Odissi dancers in Orissa did not have a platform in their own state. So, in 1986, he started the first Konark Dance & Music Festival at the Konark Sun Temple and formed the Konark Natya Mandap. The Konark Natya Mandap is now an international centre where training in Odissi, Gotipua, Chhou, Pala, vocal and instrumental music are imparted to youngsters. Several years ago, Gangadhar started the Dhauli Dance Festival. Besides these, he also started several small dance festivals such as Nimapara Dance Festival, Chilika Dance Festival, Kalinga Kala Utsav, Basanta Utsav, Boita Bandana Utsav, Bhaunri Utsav, etc. The annual Chitralekha Dance Academy Festival in Canada was also held under his stewardship.

Danseuse Aruna Mohanty, one of his first disciples, says Gangadhar was a visionary. “He found teaching Odissi his true calling,” said Mohanty.

2008-09 Festivals and Fairs Calendar (organized by OTDC)

Bhubaneswar- Cuttack- Puri, Circuit: Bhubaneswar-Chilika-Puri, Ekamra Utsav, Bhubaneswar, Festivals, Konark Festival, Puri, Raja Rani music festival Comments Off on 2008-09 Festivals and Fairs Calendar (organized by OTDC)

 

Sl. No.

Date

Name of the Event

1

2

3

1.

1st – 5th December 08

Konark Festival

 

2.

15th – 27th December 08

Toshali National Crafts Mela

 

3.

10th  – 20th January 09

EKAMRA : The Temple City Festival

 

i.

10th – 11th January 09

Kalinga Mahotsav

 

ii.

12th – 20th January 09

International Food Festival

 

iii.

14th – 16th January 09

Mukteswar Dance Festival

 

iv.

18th – 20th January 09

Rajarani Music Festival

 

4.

25th – 31st January 09

Shreekshetra Utsav

 

i.

25th – 27th January 09

Shree Jayadev Odissi Sangeet  Samaroh

 

ii.

25th – 31st January 09

Odissi Food Festival

 

5.

26th Jan – 1st February 09

Tribal Fair at Bhubaneswar

8th Konark festival: 1st to 5th December (Schedule from a Samaja ad)

Festivals, Konark, Konark Festival, Tourist promotion Comments Off on 8th Konark festival: 1st to 5th December (Schedule from a Samaja ad)

See also http://www.orissatourism.gov.in/new/kon_festival.htm. Following are some excerpts:

The annual Konark Festival, which is held in an open air auditorium with the temple as the backdrop, showcases a magical parade of India’s classical and traditional dance forms. Eminent dancers and their troupe delight visitors in the wintry evening of early December with dramatic choreographies.

Besides, the dance performances the visitors will be treated, in an Artist Camp, to an exhibition of Orissan temple sculptures which are often described as poetry transcribed on stone. Sand Art exhibition will be yet another attraction for tourists.

PROGRAMMES

Date

1st Session
(6.00 PM – 7.00 PM)

2nd Session
(7.00 PM – 8.00 PM)

01-12-07

ODISSI
GKCM Odissi Research Centre, Bhubaneswar  

KATHAK
Bireshwar Gautam, Mumbai

02-12-07

KATHAKALI
Dr. Venkit & Troupe, Kerala

ODISSI
Kaisiki
(Dakshya Mashruwalla & Group), Mumbai

03-12-07

ODISSI
Banshi Bilas, Bhubaneswar

BHARATNATYAM
Geeta Chandran, New Delhi

04-12-07

MOHINIATTAM
Shyamala Sundaran, Kerala

ODISSI
Madhavi Mudgal & Group, New Delhi

05-12-07

ODISSI
Utkal Sangeet Mahavidyalay, Bhubaneswar

MANIPURI
Performing Art Centre, Imphal, Manipur

It is a festival of classical dances of India performed at the backdrop of the Sun Temple, Konark.

Konark Festival was organised for the first time in 1989 in the Open Air Auditorium at Konark constructed with the financial assistance of Government of India.

Conceived as a festival of Classical Dances of India, the objective of Konark Festival was to promote Konark as well as Orissa as place of tourist destination.

Initially during the year 1989 and 1990, the festival was being organised for a period of 3 days. Subsequently increased to 7 days during 1991 and 1992 in different dates. Since 1993 the festival is being organised for a period of 5 days from December 1-5 every year. The festival was however not organised during 1999 due to the Super Cyclone.

 

Various winter time tourist oriented festivals in Orissa

Ekamra Utsav, Bhubaneswar, Festivals, Kalinga Mahotsav, Dhauli, Konark Festival, Puri beach festival, Raja Rani music festival, TOURISM, ENTERTAINMENT and SHOPPING Comments Off on Various winter time tourist oriented festivals in Orissa

Following is extracted from a Kalinga Times report.

  • Nov 16-18: Parab festival at Koraput.
  • Nov 23-27: Shreekshetra-Beach Festival, Puri.
  • December 1-5: Konark Festival.
  • Jan 3-17: Toshali-Ekamra Festival in Bhubaneswar. The festival will be include a 10-day Toshali Crafts Fair and the following:
    • Mukteswar Dance evening from January 3 to 5
    • Rajarani Music Evening from January 5 to 7
    • Kalinga Martial Dance Evening at Dhauli on January 8 and 9
    • Folk dance festival from January 10 to 17
    • International Food Festival from January 3 to 17
    • National Level Handloom and Handicrafts Exhibition-cum-sale from January 3 to 17
    • Walking Tours of Heritage Corridors from January 6 to 13
  • Jan 4-6: Folk Dance Festival at Sambalpur.