Not on display

Theatre Costume

Artist/Maker

Ram Gopal was one of the most important dancers of the 20th century and certainly one of the most exotic theatre performers. He was a major figure in the revival of Indian dance and his spectacular theatrical presentations introduced it to audiences both in Asia and the West. He was proud of the authenticity of his music, costuming and style, shrewdly tailored his presentations to Western audiences, using modern theatrical techniques and spectacular presentation.
Many Indian dance costumes incorporate arm bracelets and this pair, in the form of a horned motif, were worn by Ram Gopal in Shiva's Dance of the Setting Sun. The 'jewels' are merely metal settings, coloured silver, blue and magenta to resemble jewels, some overlaid with clear glass, so that the colour shows through.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.
(Some alternative part names are also shown below)
  • Theatre Costumes
  • Dance Costumes
  • South Asian
  • Bracelets (Jewelry)
  • Theatre Costumes
  • Dance Costumes
  • South Asian
  • Bracelets (Jewelry)
Materials and techniques
Metal settings coloured as jewels, paste jewels, synthetic fabric, metal, enamel, wool.
Brief description
Arm bracelets probably worn by Ram Gopal in Shiva's Dance of the Setting Sun.
Physical description
Pair of elastic arm bracelets with horned yellow metal settings attached, coloured with pink, blue, and silver to imitate jewels, each with a pink wool pom-pom
Credit line
Given by the Trustees of the Ram Gopal Estate
Object history
These arm bracelets were probably worn with headdress S.112-2004 by Ram Gopal in Shiva's Dance of the Setting Sun and Lord of Shiva dances.
Historical context
Ram Gopal (1912?-2003) and Uday Shankar, were the most important Indian dancers of the 20th century. Gopal built on Shankar's pioneering revival of Indian dance and its introduction to audiences both in Asia and the West, taking it one stage further. He remained faithful to the pure discipline, technique and ethos of Indian classical but he also started to open out a deeper appreciation of Indian classical dance traditions, shrewdly tailored to Western audiences, using modern theatrical techniques and spectacular presentation. He widened audiences experiences by including music and other folk and classical styles alongside his own pieces. Each item was preceded by an explanation, enabling audiences to understand and appreciate what was, at that time, a very esoteric art form.
For three decades he was a major world star, with a glamour and charisma equal to any other major dance star of the period. He not only raised public awareness of the richness of Indian dance but worked with dancers trained in other dance forms, like Alicia Markova, thus setting a precedent in Britain for the current thriving and creative South Asian dance scene, which mixes classical Indian dance with other contemporary and classical dance styles to create something uniquely itself.
Each of Gopal's costumes was hand made and tailored to his own design. He spent huge sums on his costumes, which could be insured for as much as £25,000. Some were made of cloth of gold, woven and tailored in India; when it became worn, it was sent back to India, melted down and rewoven.
Summary
Ram Gopal was one of the most important dancers of the 20th century and certainly one of the most exotic theatre performers. He was a major figure in the revival of Indian dance and his spectacular theatrical presentations introduced it to audiences both in Asia and the West. He was proud of the authenticity of his music, costuming and style, shrewdly tailored his presentations to Western audiences, using modern theatrical techniques and spectacular presentation.
Many Indian dance costumes incorporate arm bracelets and this pair, in the form of a horned motif, were worn by Ram Gopal in Shiva's Dance of the Setting Sun. The 'jewels' are merely metal settings, coloured silver, blue and magenta to resemble jewels, some overlaid with clear glass, so that the colour shows through.
Collection
Accession number
S.113:1 to 2-2004

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdOctober 27, 2004
Record URL
Download as: JSON