Materials
chisel
ICH Materials 23
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Par-zo, The Art of Woodblock Carving_Procedure 4, 5
4. After drying, sprinkle water on the back of the script sheet and rub gently by fingers until the trace of the script is visible in the wood which in result appear like A mirror-image script.\n\n5. Using the tip of chisel, prick deep at all the empty spaces and pour mustard oil over it. It helps to appear clear visibility of the script in addition to softening the wood Keep. The oil should be absorbed totally by the wood.
Bhutan -
Par-zo, The Art of Woodblock Carving_ Engraving Tools 2
Sek-chung is the main engraving tool made of a good quality metal, handle of soft wood and with a metal ring to prevent the handle from cracking the handle. It is similar to the skew chisel with pointy slanted tip. These appears in various sizes depending on the size of scripts.
Bhutan -
Par-zo, The Art of Woodblock Carving_Min-dru (engraving tool)
Min-dru is another important engraving tool mainly used for making a hole and carving curve shaped syllebles such as; O-shaped or half-circular-shaped scripts. Min-dru is like a fluted chisel and it has similar length and decorations like Sek-chung.
Bhutan -
Mukha ng Moryonan(Mask Making for the Moryonan Lenten Tradition in Marinduque)
The tools in making the moryon, most of which are different kinds of chisel. The Tagalog people of Marinduque Island, Philippines, practices the moryonan or pagmomoryon, a penitential ritual during Holy Week. The practice is distinctive for the wearing of heavy masks. The town of Mogpog is said to be the origin of the practice and it is where one finds its most traditional form.
Philippines
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2018 Research Reports of CPI Participants
As part of the Cultural Partnership Initiative of 2018, ICHCAP invited ICH professionals from Kyrgyzstan, Thailand, Myanmar, Philippines. This publication is a collection of the research reports of 2017 CPI participants. The participants selected their own topic and conducted researches based on their various activities during their five-month stay in Korea.
South Korea 2018 -
HA NOI INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE IN CONTEMPORARY LIFE
For a very long time, the publication of a book on the intangible cultural heritage of Hà Nội has been a deeply held wish of all the researchers and staff of the Centre for Research and Promotion of Cultural Heritage (CCH), an affiliated organisation of the Association of Cultural Heritage of Viet Nam. The aim of this book is to identify and introduce the richness and great value of the living cultural heritage of Hà Nội, our capital city and a great centre of 1,000 years of civilisation in our country. Our volume is thus a means of documenting and memorialising the boundless merits of our ancestors, and of the many generations of the communities who have continually created and sustained an extraordinarily diverse array of cultural expressions, making Hà Nội a precious repository of ancient traditions and living creativity: a land rich in cultural values, and a source of pride to all Vietnamese citizens, and especially to all the people of Hà Nội.
Viet Nam 2017 -
Preliminary Survey on Dormant ICH Data in the Pacific
The two-year preliminary survey started in 2015 with the participation of the Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Palau, Papua New Guinea, and Tonga. Each partner selected two or three local institutes with stored ICH recordings. Considering time and resources, we decided that each partner institutes would identify and include at least 300 data materials and information about their location, storage conditions, and contents.\n\nThanks to our partners’ efforts and cooperation, we now have better understanding of the available ICH materials. This report is based on the five submitted survey reports. It contains basic metadata of the target materials, types of recordings, current storage conditions, frequency of usage, and other information. While this report does not cover all dormant data in the Pacific, we hope it can serve as a first step in activating dormant ICH data.
South Korea 2017 -
2021 Expert Meeting for Building Network on Maritime ICH
This Book is the outcomes of the 2021 Expert Meeting for Building Network on Maritime ICH, which is held on 29 October 2021.\n\nThe expert meeting was co-organized by ICHCAP and SPC under the theme of Maritime Living Heritage: Coastal Communities in the Asia-Pacific Region and Their Traditional Food System.\nThis meeting consisted of two sessions with the different approaches to the costal communities and their traditional food system; ecocultural approach and socio-cultural approach. This book contains nine case studies of experts and scholars.
South Korea 2021
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Fishing, Housing, and Barter: A Threefold to Living Sea-Based Economy in Lamalera, IndonesiaOur society is moving toward becoming more urban, individualistic, and modern. As it does so, traditional communities may eventually experience a real, and not just relative, local cultural decline. There is a threat that more traditions will vanish as the traditional way of life becomes less and less known, and the local economy system becomes outdated. However, we should also acknowledge that some traditional\ncommunities still exist. Lamalera is one of those traditional communities. In this paper, I try to single out the Lamalera tradition—namely ola nua, particularly its sea-based economy, which might be different from most economy systems in modern society. There are three reasons for this choice. First, Lamalera is a traditional community that exemplifies a sea-based economy as an integral part of society. Second, Lamalera has a long history of this traditional economy. Third, the sea-based economy in Lamalera has been a unique and distinctive culture that appropriates traditional economy as a way of life for Lamalerans, not as an ‘imposed thing’ from outside. In modern society, which is characterized by capitalism and mechanization (industrialization), the economy system causes alienation and exploitation: workers are alienated from their own human potential. In a contemporary perspective, as individual workers become highly specialized in division of labor, the deployment of tasks per person results in the performance to be more impersonal and\nautomated. In Lamalera, on the other hand, even with differentiation in positions and roles, Lamalerans work and express their potentials for the purpose of the community to which they belong.Year2021NationSouth Korea
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Comparative Study on the Safeguarding System of the Traditional Crafts Between Korea and Vietnam: The Case Study of the Traditional Lacquer CraftThe lacquer craft is one of the traditional crafts with tangible manifestation of intangible cultural heritage (ICH). Hence, it can play an important role in representing the culture and traditions of any country and considered an effective way to preserve of rich traditional arts, cultural heritage, traditional skills and talents which are associated with people’s lifestyle as well as history. As a typical ICH in Asia, traditional lacquer craft contains a system of knowledge, perspectives, emotions, creativities, and a great way to document historical periods around the world and throughout the times. Over time, the lacquer craft is not only an ICH with an admirable historical length, but it has also been pushed up into a creative art form based on wisdom of stakeholder communities.Year2019NationViet Nam