Mamallapuram

 

Home First, a quick visual recap of my trip so far

Without Geography We're Nowhere

 

 

 

 

I flew into Mumbai, then went almost immediately to Pune, to stay for 10 days...

 

...at the home of Madhu, the father of Amolika, with whom I worked in New Jersey

        
 

 

 

I then trained it to Pushkar, for the camel fair

 

 

I caught a bus to Jaipur, where I spent a couple of fairly unexciting days

 

 

Then a couple days in Agra, to see the Taj Mahal 

 

 

 

And over to Varanasi for nine days on the Ganges

After traversing the northern tier of India--Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh--I was anxious to escape to warmer climes

So I boarded a sleeper train for the 36 hour journey from Varanasi to Chennai.  Two nights on the train and I was getting restless, though I had some good company in the persons of some Brahmins who are Vedic scholars

 

 

After disembarking at Chennai I boarded a bus for the two hour jaunt to Mamallapuram

 

You can see that I'm now solidly in the south of India

and I'm warm

 

 

 

 

 

Mamallapuram is a functioning fishing village, with a sizeable tourist area 

 

 

 

facing the Bay of Bengal

 

 

 

Bringing in the direct-drive engines, after bringing in the day's catch 

 

 

 

 

mending the nets

 

 

 

  I stayed there two weeks, and used it as sort of R&R, such as New Year's Eve at Gecko Cafe

 

 India is hard work, and occasional rests are welcome

 

 

If you had to choose one word to associate with Mamallapuram, it would be stone.  Nestled against the town is a small hill profusely strewn with boulders 

 

 

 

 

 and exposed rock surfaces 

 

One of the largest rock faces in this hill has been sculpted into Arjuna's Penance, a massive open-air bas-relief monolith

 43 feet high, 96 feet long

Here with a stage set up for their annual dance festival
 

 

 

The cleft between the two portions is said to represent the descent of the Ganges River to earth

 

 

 

Check out those elephants, tending their young

 

Arjunas Penance showcases more than 100 figures of gods and flying celestial creatures, birds and animals, along with human beings and saints.

 

 

 

Not far from Arjuna's Penance is Krishna's Butterball

What keeps it there?

If my boulder rolling days weren't behind me, I'd go looking for a peevee to dislodge it

 

 

The hill contains even more structures, known as monolithic architecture--carved out of single pieces of stone

 

Ganesa Ratha

 

 

These remind me of Petra, in Jordan (see my Jordan/Syria blog)

 

 

 

Ramanuja Mantaram

 

In addition to open-air canvases and monolithic architecture, Mamallapuram's love affair with stone involves over 200 sculptors working in the area
 

 

 

They receive commissions from around the world

 

Arjuna's Penance also provided the dramatic backdrop for Mamallapuram's annual festival of folk and classical dance

I attended three evenings

 

 

 

One of the best was Uma Ramesh, who performed Bharatanatyam, a classical dance with very expressive gestures--something typical of Indians

 

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