Yakshagana
- August 29, 2021
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
No Comments
Yakshagana
Subject – Art and Culture
Context – A Yakshagana play with an artist performing all the roles of a ‘prasanga’ (episode) is on the verge of making it to the over-the-top (OTT) platform for the first time.
Concept –
- Yakshagana is a traditional theatre form of
- It is a temple artform that depicts mythological stories and Puranas.
- It is performed with massive headgears, elaborate facial make-up and vibrant costumes and ornaments.
- Usually recited in Kannada, it is also performed in Malayalamas well as Tulu (the dialect of south Karnataka).
- It is performed with percussion instruments like chenda, maddalam, jagatta or chengila (cymbals) and chakratala or elathalam (small cymbals).
- The most popular episodes are from the Mahabharatae. Draupadi swayamvar, Subhadra vivah, etc. and from Ramayanai.e. Rajyabhishek, Lav-Kush yuddh, etc.
- Yakshagana is performed in open-air theatres.
- It is usually performed in the village paddy fields after the winter crop has been harvested.
- Yakshagana is traditionally presented from dusk to dawn.
- Earlier days, the Yakshagana theatre was known as Bhagavatara attar, which revolved round the stories of Lord Krishna and Vishnu