Categories: Photos

Kummattikali in Thrissur – Kerala

Kummattikali or Kummatti Kali is the famous colorful mask-dance of Kerala, prevalent in Thrissur District, Palakkad District and parts of South Malabar. During the festival of Onam, Kummattikali performers move from house to house collecting small gifts and entertaining people. Kummatti dances are rampant in the Thrissur district during Onam. Pristine or original form of Kummattikali can be seen in the Bhadrakali temple in Palakkad district.

The costumes are a most interesting facet of Kummattikali. The dancers don a heavily painted colourful wooden mask depicting faces of Krishna, Narada, Kiratha, Darika, or hunters. These masks are usually made out of saprophyte, jack fruit tree, Alstonia scholaris, Hog Plum tree or the Coral tree.

The dancers wear skirts woven out of plaited grass. Some cover their whole body with bunches of grass for a more bushy appearance. The semblance is made more joyful with the ‘talla’ attached externally to the mask giving the appearance of a toothless open mouth. Dancers also hold and manipulate long sticks of residuary agricultural produce called ‘Kummattikali’: it is from this that the dance derives its name. Their dance is related to Shaiva myth. ‘Thamma’ (an old woman) walks in front with the help of a stick. Thamma is symbolic of mother of every being and everything.

Kummatti dancers are a sight to watch as they move around from house to house collecting jaggery, rice, or small amounts of cash. Onlookers, specially children take great delight in their performance.

The rhythm for the dance movements is provided by vibrating the string of a bow like instrument called an Onavillu. Areca nut wood is used to make the bow and the strings are beaten with a narrow bamboo stick.

The themes of Kummattikali are mostly taken from the stories of Ramayana, Darika Vadham, the story of Shiva and folk tales like Manjan Nayare Pattu.

It may be noted that folk art of Kerala can be classified into two broad categories – ritualistic and non-ritualistic. Ritualistic can be further divided into – Devotional, performed to please a particular god and goddess and Magical Art Forms. Theyyam, Thira, Poothamthira, Kannyar Kali, Kummattikali, etc. are some of devotional art forms.

Photos: Johnson V Chirayath.

Alex

Recent Posts

ShareChat Reduces Cloud Spend 70% with Redpanda Streaming Data

India’s Largest Social Media Company Turns to Redpanda “Bring Your Own Cloud” Deployment for Greater…

13 mins ago

Arista Launches Next Generation Multi-Domain Segmentation for Zero Trust Networking

Microsegmentation solution mitigates threats across east-west lateral networks SANTA CLARA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Arista Networks (NYSE: ANET),…

14 mins ago

Guidewire Expands Insurtech Vanguards Pitch Days, Taking Event Global

The program extends worldwide growth and strengthens engagement with insurtechs in APAC and EMEA to…

17 mins ago

Liberate Medical Announces PREVENT Study with $6.5M Grant Funding from the US DoD – Enrolls First Patients Globally

The PREVENT study is the pivotal clinical trial of the VentFree® Respiratory Muscle Stimulator and…

1 hour ago

Saviynt Appoints Sanjeevi Kumar to Expand its Sales Footprint in India

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Saviynt, a leading provider of cloud-native identity and governance platform solutions, today announced…

1 hour ago