Come for the hooping, stay for fire poi, dapostar and leviwand. India’s newest subculture blends art and athletics, meditation and showmanship, public & private
Rewind to the pandemic, when a clip of Eshna Kutty, dancing to Genda Phool in a sari and sneakers while twirling a hula hoop, went viral in September 2020. The two-minute video (@EshnaKutty on Instagram) showed Kutty gracefully, joyfully spinning her hoop on her torso, moving it seamlessly to her arms, neck and even feet. It notched more than 2.3 million views. Almost overnight, the hoop went from being a fitness tool, a child’s plaything, to a gateway into an Instaworthy art form for homebound Indians.
Eshna Kutty’s viral hoop video in 2020 made hoop dancing popular.
Hoop dancer Annabele Charles says the hoop is almost an extension of her body.Yacobeh is proficient in several flow arts, including leviwand, dapostar and staff. (INSTAGRAM/@YACOBEH)Nitesh Sharma designs, sells and teaches people about the dapostar – an eight-pointed spinning cloth. (INSTAGRAM/@FLOWCHAKRA)Eshna Kutty says hooping is now mainstream. Everyone wants to try it. (DANIELLE JENÉ DESIGNS)