The President of India, Pranab Mukherjee will
confer the prestigious Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowships and Akademi
Awards for 2011 at a special ceremony on 9 October 2012. This year
eleven eminent personalities will be conferred with Akademi Fellowships
and thirty six artists will receive the Akademi Awards.
The Akademi Fellowship (Akademi Ratna) and Akademi Award (Akademi
Puraskar) are recognized as the highest national honours conferred on
performing artists, gurus and scholars of the performing arts and have
come to stay as the most coveted honour which the artistes aspire to.
These honours are decided by Akademi’s General Council, the apex body
consisting of eminent artistes, scholars and nominees of Government of
India and of different States and Union Territories of the country.
The highest honour of Akademi Fellowship (Akademi Ratna) will be
conferred on Shri Mukund Lath, Shri Hariprasad Chaurasia, Shri Shivkumar
Sharma, Shri Amjad Ali Khan, Shri Umayalpuram Kasiviswanatha Sivaraman,
Shri Mohan Chandrasekaran, Shri Rajkumar Singhajit Singh, Shri
Kalamandalam Gopi, Smt Padma Subrahmanyam, Shri Chandrasekhar
Basavanneppa Kambara and Shri Heisnam Kanhailal. They will receive
purse money of Rupees three lakhs, besides an angavastram and a
tamrapatra. The Fellowship of the Akademi is the most rare honour, which
is restricted to a limited number at a given time. Presently there are
only 40 living Fellows of the Sangeet Natak Akademi.
The eminent representatives of Music, Dance and Theatre to be honoured
with the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award for 2011 will receive purse money
of Rupees one lakh, angavastram and tamrapatra.
In the field of Music, nine eminent artists, namely Shruti Sadolikar
Katkar and Marathe Venkateshkumar for Hindustani Vocal Music,
Tota Ram Sharma (Pakhawaj) and Pushpraj Ramlal Koshti (Surbahar) for
Hindustani Instrumental Music, J Venkatraman for Carnatic Vocal Music,
Ellapulli Mahadevaiyer Subramaniam (Ghatam), Ayyagari Syamasundaram
(Veena) and Seshampatti T Sivalingam (Nagaswaram) for Carnatic
Instrumental Music, and Gopal Chandra Panda (Odissi Music) for Other
Major Traditions of Music, will receive the Akademi Award 2011.
In the field of Dance, nine eminent practitioners, namely Narthaki
Nataraj (Bharatanatyam), Manjusree Chatterjee (Kathak), Thonnakkal
Peethambaran (Kathakali), Priti Patel (Manipuri), Alekhya Punjala
(Kuchipudi), Ramli Ibrahim (Odissi), V K Hymavathy (Mohiniattam),
Tanusree Shankar (Creative & Experimental Dance) and Karaikudi R.
Krishnamurthy (Music for Dance - Mridangam) will receive the Award for
2011.
In the field of Theatre, eight eminent persons who will be receiving the
Akademi Awards are Kirti Jain for Direction, Amitabh Srivastava, Vikram
Chandrakant Gokhle, Neena Tiwana and A R Srinivasan for Acting, R
Nageswara Rao for Major Traditions of Theatre – Company Theatre, Andhra
Pradesh and Kamal Jain for Allied Theatre Arts (Lighting).
For their contribution to other Traditional/Folk/ Tribal Music/ Dance/
Theatre and Puppetry, eight artists - Thrippekulam Achuta Marar for
Traditional Music (Kerala), Hemant Rajabhai Chauhan for Folk Music
(Gujarat), Gurmeet Bawa for Folk Music (Punjab), Kashi Ram Sahu for
Folk Theatre (Chhattisgarh), Mipham Otsal for Traditional Theatre (Jammu
& Kashmir), Belagallu Veeranna for Togalu Gombeyatta, Puppetry
(Karnataka), Gopal Chandra Das for Putul Nach (Tripura) and Qasim Khan
Niyazi for Making of Musical Instrument (Delhi) will be conferred with
the Akademi Award for the year 2011.
Shrivatsa Goswami will receive the Akademi Award 2011 for Overall Contribution / Scholarship to Performing Arts.
Alakhnandan (Theatre–Direction) and Sundari Krishnalal Shridharani
(Overall Contribution) were also selected for Akademi Awards 2011. Due
to their demise the said Award will be conferred on them posthumously.
The Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowships and Awards 2011 presentation
ceremony will be followed by a Festival of Music, Dance and Drama
featuring Fellows and Awardees of the year from 9-16 October 2012.
The Sangeet Natak Akademi, established by the Government of India on 31
May 1952, is the National Academy of Music, Dance and Drama. It was
created as the apex body in the country for the task of preservation and
promotion of the performing art tradition of India. One of the
important activities of the Akademi has been to give recognition and
honours to artistes for setting standards in performing arts and
restoring the art and artists to their rightful place in independent
India.
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