Postcards of Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity proclaimed by UNESCO
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Yamahoko, the float ceremony of the Kyoto Gion festival (2009)
Source UNESCO ICH website http://www.unesco.org/culture/ich
Opera dei Pupi, Sicilian Puppet Theatre (2008)
These theatres were often family-run businesses; the carving, painting and construction of the puppets, renowned for their intense expressions, were carried out by craftspeople employing traditional methods. The puppeteers constantly endeavoured to outdo each other with their shows, and they exerted great influence over their audience. In the past, these performances took place over several evenings and provided opportunities for social gatherings.
The economic and social upheavals caused by the extraordinary economic boom of the 1950s had a considerable effect on the tradition, threatening its very foundations. At that time, similar forms of theatre in other parts of Italy disappeared, some of them to re-emerge some twenty years later. The Opera dei Pupi is the only example of an uninterrupted tradition of this kind of theatre. Owing to current economic difficulties puppeteers can no longer make a living from their art, prompting them to turn to more lucrative professions. Tourism has contributed to reducing the quality of performances, which were previously aimed at a local audience only."
Source UNESCO ICH website http://www.unesco.org/culture/ich