Materials
tent
ICH Materials 85
Photos
(44)-
Rituals and customs tent
Art Council of Mongolia, Culture Naadam Project
Mongolia -
Process of making wooden frames of the yurt
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Kyrgyzstan -
Traditional games tent
Art Council of Mongolia, Culture Naadam Project
Mongolia -
Women performing _koshok_ inside the yurt
Kyrgyzstan -
Setting up the tyunduk (crown) of the yurt
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Kyrgyzstan -
Traditional knowledge and skills in making Kyrgyz and Kazakh yurts (Turkic nomadic dwellings)
Yurt production includes knowledge and skills in creating a portable dwelling traditionally used by Kazakh and Kyrgyz people. Yurt has a dismountable wooden circular frame covered with felt and braided with ropes. Yurts can be easily set up and dismantled within a short period of time. Yurts are basically characterized as easily transportable, compact, ecological and practical dwellings.\nBearers of yurt-making traditional knowledge are craftspeople (men and women), producing yurts and yurts’ interior decorations.\nMen and their apprentices make yurts’ wooden frames, traditionally by hand using special devices and instruments. Men also make wooden, leather, bone and metal details for yurts and household items. Women make yurt coverings and interior decorations. As a rule, they work in community-based groups supervised by experienced skilled women-artisans. Women-artisans use weaving, spinning, braiding, felting, embroidering, sewing, winding and other traditional handicraft technologies. Women’s work- process is usually accompanied by their singing, joking, telling stories about famous masters of the past and treating traditional meals.
Kazakhstan -
Yurt making process
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Kyrgyzstan -
Yurt details_Kyzyl Tuu village
Kyrgyzstan -
Inside the yurt -_Boz ui_
Kyrgyzstan -
Traditional knowledge and skills in making Kazakh Yurts
The yurt is a nomadic dwelling used among the Kazakh and Kyrgyz peoples. It has a wooden circular frame covered with felt and braided with ropes, and can be easily assembled and dismantled within a short period of time. The bearers of yurt-making knowledge are craftspeople, both men and women, who produce yurts and their interior decorations. Yurts are made from natural and renewable raw materials. Men and their apprentices make the wooden frames by hand, along with wooden, leather, bone and metal details. Women make the interior decorations and exterior coverings, ornamented with traditional zoomorphic, vegetative or geometric patterns.
Kazakhstan -
Mukha ng Moryonan(Mask Making for the Moryonan Lenten Tradition in Marinduque)
Native wood is the main material in the making of moryon masks used in the moryonan ritual. 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 -
Mukha ng Moryonan(Mask Making for the Moryonan Lenten Tradition in Marinduque)
The NCCA ICH team documents moryon mask making and mask makers in Morgpog, Marinduque, Philippines.
Philippines