Sunday, September 20, 2009

A portable shrine (and a piece of clever storytelling!)

Have you ever seen a Kavad? I saw one in Udaipur, and I was fascinated by it.

A Kavad is an amazing wooden painted temple, with lots of panels and secret compartments that fold out to tell a story. The Kavadiya Bhats, the Priests of the Kavad, take these around from village to village. The really fascinating thing is, the story doesn't make sense unless you open the panels in the correct sequence. Why? Because a fair bit of tricky carpentry has gone into the kavad - some panels slide out, some swivel on a stick, some open out like drawers, and still some others are fold-outs...And of course, only the Kavadiya Bhat knows the secret sequence! So the audience sits, fascinated, as the Bhat tells the story in song and dance, turns the little panels this way and that. Here's one of the panels:


As the story develops, the Kavadiya too progresses towards the inner-most central panel, and the story comes to its logical climax with the final image of the God or Goddess in full regalia, very much like a temple sanctum.

Here's another kavad (about ten feet wide when it is opened out fully). And you can see, at the centre of the kavad, the grand finale of the story - the coronation image of Lord Ram!
Here's a closer look at the central sanctum:At this point, the narration ends, and, guess what, the audience is required to put money into the kavad - there's a little box for it, a slit in the kavad, specially designed for this! Ah, what a tricky box of carpentry, and what a fantastic story-telling aid this. I wish we could bring a Kavadiya to the cities, and ask them to fashion this as an aid for history lessons in our schools. How utterly delighted the children would be!

10 comments:

Pramod said...

Fantastic ! It's unbelievable that it's not more well-known

Vandita said...

wow ! Didn't know about this. Amazing art of story telling combined with painting and carpentry skills..can imagine how powerful the effect can be on audience.

Aadil Desai said...

I read there is an exhibition/display near Konkan Bhavan where they sell these too. It is a place similar to the Delhi Haat.

Leela Salivati said...

Its just fabulous ....I want to buy one, but no space !.Thanks Deepa for constantly bringing these kinds of gems to the fore.

Anonymous said...

This is grand! Where does one go to see such storytelling.

Anonymous said...

Where can I buy this ??

Vandhana

Deepa said...

I just moved to a new office in Delhi, so I went to Dastkaar in Khan Market (above Amrapali) and bought a kavad for our office :)

Anonymous said...

Never seen one! Glad I visited this page.
Thank you!

Nisha said...

How fascinating!

I wanted to know if they still make & sell it but your comment above said it all.

Any place in Mumbai where I can shop for it?

Unknown said...

Fantastic! Where can I meet kavad storytellers for my thesis...can I get a contact no?