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"In
Gods Mirror: Theater as Prayer in Southern India"
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Pepita Seth

From left: Pepita Seth, Amy Trompetter, Senior Lecturer,
and a Barnard student.
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New
York, NY, October 18-- Pepita Seth, internationally acclaimed
photographer of Theyyam rituals in southern India,
shared her lifelong passion for this sacred art form in
a recent lecture at Barnard as part of an exhibit of her
work on display at the College.
The photographs by Seth were on display through Friday,
Oct. 4 in Altschul Atrium.
Although Seth first experienced Theyyam in 1972an
experience which she describes as "remarkable and powerful"her
real connection with Theyyam began by accident in
1985. Seth was en route to Malabar, the northern region
of Kerala. Her bus stopped just as the preliminary rituals
of a rare Theyyam festival performed only once
every 65 yearswere beginning. Seth had to request
the permission of the chief Theyyam performer, a deity,
to photograph the festival. She was allowed, and thus began
her relationship with Theyyam. Since then, she has
gone back for prolonged visits to the Malabar region of
Kerala every year and has developed close friendships with
the people of Kerala. Her relationship with them and with
Theyyam, she said in a lecture on Oct. 2, "has
been very much [one] of passion."
Seths photographs capture the myriad aspects of Theyyam,
from the intimacy of preliminary ritual to the richness
and beauty of the performance itself. For the people of
northern Kerala, ritualism is their world. Theyyam,
a word that derives from daivam, meaning "god,"
is practiced mostly within the lower castes of the region.
It is 2000-year-old ritual theater in which an artist becomes
a divine being and is invested with that deitys power.
The gods and goddesses of Theyyam are not inanimate;
rather, they are manifest in the possessed bodies of the
ritual artists.
The Malayalam word for the ritual artists literally translates
to "image man", and that is precisely what happens:
through a man, the deitys image comes to life. To
make this happen, the ritual artist must undertake a journey
from interior to outer consciousness, finally becoming the
deity.
The preliminary ritual, or Thottam, tells the history
of the god or goddess and takes place in the shrine. It
is during this time that the artist receives the deitys
spirit. This ritual is rich with symbolism and tradition:
only the artists family members are allowed to take
part in the makeup and costuming of the artist, and the
preparations take place only by candlelight.
The deitys makeup is referred to as "body writing"
and is believed to have magical and medicinal properties.
No visible skin is left unpainted, and every design has
a specific meaning. After the makeup is done, the artist
begins to put on the elaborate, larger-than-life costume.
Though the artists helpers are family members, as
the deity begins to emerge they show him increasing deference
and respect. Likewise, the artist himself becomes increasingly
silent, knowing that the god or goddess is taking over.
The most sacred part of the costume is the headpiece, which,
as in the case of the great goddess Muchilotu Bhagavathi,
can weigh up to eighty pounds. The culmination of Thottam
is the "showing of the face," when the artist
looks in a hand mirror for the first time. Finally, the
preliminary ritual is complete: the artist recognizes himself
not as a human, but as a divine being.
After Thottam, the Theyyam festival takes
place. Seth, who lived in Kerala for six years and still
visits annually, has seen countless and various Theyyam
performances. Each caste has its own set of gods and goddesses
that its members are allowed to performfrom a few
to as many as seventy-five. Each of these deities has his
or her own personality and history, and it is through Theyyam
that these are revealed to devotees. In Theyyam the
deity interacts directly with the devotees, conferring blessings,
answering questions, and receiving homage.
Seth is currently conducting six months of research in the
Hindu temple of Guruvayur in Kerala, and is subsequently
expected to return to Barnard to share her most recent work.
--Lea
Mae Rice 05
Contact:
Petra Tuomi, 212-854-7580
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