Nataraja:-
LORD NATARAJA
popularly used as a symbol of Indian culture in particular as
one of the finest illustrations of Hindu art.
Nataraja (Sanskrit: नटराज, romanized: Naṭarāja) is a depiction of
the Hindu God Shiva as the cosmic ecstatic dancer. His dance is
called Tandavam or Nadanta, depending on the context of the dance. The
pose and artwork is described in many Hindu texts such as the Anshumadbhed
agama and Uttarakamika agama, the dance relief or idol
featured in all major Hindu Temples of Shaivism.
The classical form of the depiction appears
in stone reliefs, as at the Ellora Caves and the badami
Caves, by around the 6th-century. Around the 10th century, it emerged
in Tamil Nadu in its mature and best-known expression in Chola
bonzes, of various heights typically less than four feet some over. The
Nataraja reliefs have been identified in historic artwork from many parts of
South Asia, in southeast Asia such as in Bali, Cambodia, and in
central Asia.
The sculpture is symbolic of Shiva as the
lord of dance and dramatic arts with its style and proportions made
according to Hindu texts on arts. It typically shows Shiva dancing in one
of the Natya Shashtra poses, holding Agni (fire) in his
left back hand, the front hand in gajahasta (elephant hand)
or dandahasta (stick hand) mudra, the front right hand
with a wrapped snake that is in abhaya (fear not) mudra while
pointing to a Sutra text, and the back hand holding a musical
instrument, usually a damaru. His body, fingers, ankles, neck, face,
head, ear lobes and dress are shown decorated with symbolic items, which vary
with historic period and region. He is surrounded by a ring of flames,
standing on a lotus pedestal, lifting his left leg (or in rare cases, the right
leg) and balancing over a demon shown as a dwarf (Apasmara or Mulakaya) who
symbolizes ignorance. The dynamism of the energetic dance is depicted with
the whirling hair which spread out in thin strands as a fan behind his head. The
details in the Nataraja artwork have been variously interpreted by Indian
scholars since the 12th-century for its symbolic meaning and theological
essence.
Nataraja is a well known
sculptural symbol in India and popularly used as a symbol of Indian culture in particular as
one of the finest illustrations of Hindu art.
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