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Snippets of Information - Dance


Institutions / Museums / Foundations



*  24 Jul 2025
Bharathiar Palkalaikoodam (Bharathiar Centre for Performing & Visual Arts, Government of Puducherry) is a multi-art institution consists of three faculties viz. Music /Dance / Fine Arts established in the year 1987 to commemorate the Birth Centenary of the National Poet Subramania Bharathi. It is being Governed by the members of the Governing Body of the Society. The object of the Bharathiar Palkalaikoodam is to carry out the propagation of Art & Culture and to establish a memorial in Pondicherry to the Poet Subramaniya Bharathi.
Source: bpk.py.gov.in/about-puducherry


*  24 Jul 2025
Centre for Cultural Resources and Training (CCRT) is one of the premier institutions working in the field of linking education with culture. Established in 1979, pioneered by Smt. Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay and Dr. Kapila Vatsyayan, it functions as an autonomous organization under the aegis of Ministry of Culture, Government of India. At the philosophical core of the CCRT lies a commitment to holistic education, encompassing the cognitive, emotional and spiritual development of children. To this end the CCRT conducts education grounded in cultural knowledge and understanding as conducive to clarity, creativity, independence of thought, tolerance and compassion.

The CCRT has its headquarters in New Delhi and Four Regional Centres at Udaipur in the west, Hyderabad in the south, Guwahati in the north-east and Damoh in Central India to facilitate the widespread dissemination of Indian art and culture. CCRT’s main thrust is to make variety of training programmes for in-service teachers, teacher educators, educational administrators and students throughout the country. It also organizes special training programmes for the physically and mentally challenged children. Educational visits to museums, monuments and historical sites are arranged to expose students to the rich Indian cultural heritage.
Source: ccrtindia.gov.in


*  24 Jul 2025
Nalanda Nritya Kala Mahavidyalaya was established in the year 1973 by the dancer academician Dr. Smt. Kanak Rele. Dr. Smt. Uma Rele is the Principal of the college. The College is permanently affiliated to the University of Mumbai, assessed & accredited by the National Accreditation & Assessment Council (NAAC) with B++ in the third cycle. It has been conferred with “Autonomous” status by the UGC in July 2024.
Source: nalandadancecollege.edu.in


*  24 Jul 2025
Rabindra Rangshala was conceived and created as a large open air theatre in the early 60's during the Centenary of Rabindra Nath Tagore on the recommendations of the Rabindra Nath Tagore Centenary Committee, headed by India's first Prime Minister. The management of Rabindra Rangshala was transferred to Sangeet Natak Akademi by the Ministry of Culture in 1993. The last programme at Rabindra Rangshala was held during the 1993-94 and activities at Rabindra Rangshala could not be held thereafter.
Source: sangeetnatak.gov.in


*  24 Jul 2025
Sangeet Natak Akademi, the apex body in the field of performing arts in the country, was set up in 1953 for the preservation and promotion of the vast intangible heritage of India’s diverse culture expressed in forms of music, dance and drama. The management of the Akademi vests in its General Council. The Chairman of the Akademi is appointed by the President of India for a term of five years.
Sangeet Natak Akademi has three constituent units, two of these being dance-teaching institutions: the Jawaharlal Nehru Manipur Dance Academy (JNMDA) at Imphal, and Kathak Kendra in Delhi. JNMDA has its origin in the Manipur Dance College established by the Government of India in April 1954. Funded by the Akademi since its inception, it became a constituent unit of the Akademi in 1957. Similarly Kathak Kendra is one of the leading teaching institutions in Kathak dance. Located in Delhi, it offers courses at various levels in Kathak dance and in vocal music and Pakhawaj.
The Sangeet Natak Akademi Awards are the highest national recognition conferred on practising artists. The Akademi also confers Fellowships on eminent artists and scholars of music, dance and drama; and has in 2006 instituted annual awards to young artists – the Ustad Bismillah Khan Yuva Puraskar. The Akademi’s archive, comprising audio and video tapes, photographs, and films is one of the largest in the country and is extensively drawn upon for research in the performing arts.
Source: sangeetnatak.gov.in


*  24 Jul 2025
Besides the constituent units, the SNA has five centres:
1. Kutiyattam Kendra, Thiruvananthapuram for preserving and promoting the age-old Sanskrit theatre of Kerala, Kutiyattam.
2. Sattriya Kendra, Guwahati for promoting the Sattriya traditions of Assam.
3. North-East Centre, Guwahati for preserving the traditional and folk performing art traditions of north-eastern India.
4. North-East Documentation Centre, Agartala for festival and field documentation in the North-east.
5. Chhau Kendra, Chandankiyari for promoting the Chhau Dances of eastern India
Source: sangeetnatak.gov.in



* 11 March 2022
Mohan Khokar Dance Collection
This rare collection of material on dance, gifted by Shri Mohan Khokar, contains over 40,000 black and white negatives, colour transparencies and rare photographs. In addition to over 4,000 monographs and journals in English and other Indian and European languages, the collection also includes albums of newspaper clippings, programmes, pamphlets, posters etc. from the early forties; field notes and dance notations on choreography made by Shri Khokar; and over 200 audio tapes, mainly of interviews with Gurus, artistes and scholars of dance. Special features of the collection are specimens of art objects with dance motifs, such as sculptures and figurines in bronze, wood, terracotta and other materials, textiles, paintings, etc, and also what may be termed ‘Bazar iconography,’ which refers to present day ugly or pathetically humorous dance figurines in plastic, clay, etc.
Source: ignca.gov.in

In his lifetime Prof. Mohan Khokar collected every book written on dance, every journal, prospectus, brochure, poster, postage stamp, rpm disc, doll, sculpture, including Chola bronzes, painting, textile, print, postcard – just about everything on dance.
Today, this material, called The Mohan Khokar Dance Collection, is the single largest holding on dance, comprising over 1,00,000 photos, 50,00,000 press clips, 5,000 books and more. Rare manuscripts, including a signed copy of Nawab Wajid Ali Shah’s Najjo and Banni; rare bronzes, including the only known Ardhanarishwara statue, paintings by Jamini Roy, Shaivax Chavda, K.K. Hebbar and personal correspondence with many legendary dancers and many more legendary names are part of this archive.
Also in the holding are recordings of all national giants and gurus, dancers and divas.
Mohan Khokar, a pioneering scholar & avid collector, a critic, connoisseur and historian made it his mission to collect everything he could on dance, its history and heritage.
Born in Quetta in Baluchistan (now in Pakistan) in 1924, this son of a military commissioner (Sardar Bhagat Ram Khokar) saw no dance until Ram Gopal, the Njinsky of India, came to Lahore to perform. (In his group was one nine-year-old dancing wonder, Baby Saroja, whom Mohan was to marry!) From then onwards, Mohan pursued both Ram Gopal and Bharatanatyam. He was the first North Indian man to enrol at Rukmini Devi Arundale’s Kalakshetra in Madras (Chennai). The year was 1940.
Mohan Khokar was only 24 years old when he was selected to head the just-born Department of Dance of the first university in India to offer Dance at the graduate level - M.S. University in Baroda, Gujarat. In 1950 and 1960 the university loaned him to the Union Education ministry in New Delhi to act as Special Officer for Dance. Later he served the Sangeet Natak Akademi for 18 years, the last five of them as its Secretary.
He did his best to nurture dance and dancers. Due to his enlightened patronage, a few rare forms, such as Kathak, Seraikella Chhau, Koodiyatam of Kerala and assorted folk traditions, survived. He ensured that children of traditional gurus got scholarships and employment so that they did not have to spurn dance as a profession. He did all this in the 1960s through the 1980s.
He also found the time and inclination to author over 5000 articles, edit and contribute significantly to journals like Marg, Pushpanjali, The Illustrated Weekly of India, Bhavan’s Journal, Surya magazine, The Hindustan Times, Sruti and attendance. He wrote seven definitive volumes on dance, which are all out of print, and many papers, like an UNESCO compilation on dance in 1974 and a discourse for the Cord Conference in 1976.
Source: dancearchivesofindia.com


* 11 Mar 2022
Kalka-Bindadin ki Dyodhi and Kathak Museum
Kalka-Bindadin ki Dyodhi and Kathak Museum
90, Gwynne Road, Wazirganj, Lucknow
(open all days of the week. There is no entry fee for visitors)
In 2016, the government had converted Pt. Birju Maharaj’s ancestral home in Wazirganj, Lucknow into a Kathak Museum. Kalka-Bindadin ki Dyodhi, as the house is referred to, was the birthplace of Pt. Birju Maharaj, the doyen of Kathak. It showcases the personal belongings like clothes, accessories and books of Maharaj ji and his family who popularised the art of Kathak. The house was given to his ancestors by Nawab Wajid Ali Shah, a great patron of arts and culture of Oudh.
The entrance leads into a courtyard with a well, where a three-dimensional mural of dancers is painted on the walls. The main hall is lined with framed photographs of Birju Maharaj’s performances with maestros like Girija Devi. The busts of his uncles Shambhu Maharaj and Lachchhu Maharaj, and father Achchhan Maharaj are displayed. A kiosk also offers information about the family tree of Birju Maharaj. Among other notable items at the museum is a poshak (costume) that was worn by Maharaj Kalka Bindadin, Pt.Birju Maharaj’s old camera and his ghunghrus. The Kathak Museum has other memorabilia on display in the room of rest, kitchen and prayer room. 
Source: nowlucknow.com


* 6 Mar 2022
Bharata-Ilango Foundation for Asian Culture (BIFAC)
The Bharata-Ilango Foundation for Asian Culture (BIFAC) is located in Pattipulam village, Thiruporur Taluk in Kanchipuram District of Tamil Nadu which is 40kms from Chennai and 7kms from Mahabalipuram / Mammallapuram, East Coast Road (ECR).
The BharataMuni temple/shrine is dedicated to the founding father of Natyasastra. Below the temple is the Bharata Museum of Performing Arts. BIFAC complex and the Museum have culturally relevant artifacts, the Kanchi Mahaswami library, the TAG digital library, and the Abhinavagupta conference hall for conducting seminars and workshops. It also displays the 100 years of Indian Classical History.
Source: casualwalker.com