by Sunil Nair
My heart leaps up when I behold
A rainbow in the sky..
- William Wordsworth, 1802
..So has the peacock's spectacular dancing to the melodic music of the nature beheld us, a motif that has been inseparably woven into the very fabric of our art and mythology.
This splendid bird has inspired many folk dance forms across northern and southern regions of India. Each of these dance forms, like the Mayur dance of Mathura, Mayura performed by the Khonds residing in densely wooded hill slopes of Andhra Pradesh, Mayilaattam of Tamilnadu and Kavadiyattam of Kerala - are unique in their artistry, costume and more so in the context.
Kavadiyattam, a religious folk dance form, is performed by devotees carrying Kaavadis and dancing to the beats of percussion instruments like Udukku, and Chenda, on their pilgrimage atop hills. Kaavadi is a long stick with milk pots tied at both the sides, with a decorated arch on top of it joining both the ends of the stick. Kaavadis are decorated with peacock feathers and flowers.
It is indeed fascinating how one bird has deeply etched many folk art forms, each as brilliant, radiant and contrasting as the colors of the bird's feathers.