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Pearls from artists* # 321
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
*an ongoing series of quotations – mostly from artists, to artists – that offers wisdom, inspiration, and advice for the sometimes lonely road we are on.
This is Bolivia, a country rich in cultural expressions. Here many great civilizations have flourished, all of which, fundamentally, are bound to the soil from which both fruits and gods emerged.
As part of the expression of these cultures, masks are not mere accessories to conceal the face or represent a character for an artistic performance. Neither are they simply for diversion.
Their roles as objects of art and diversion make sense only as part of a ceremonial act. Then, masks can be understood as the remembrance of history and myth, the externalization of collective life. They are seen within the context of a religious or social ceremony whose meaning is embedded in the past as well as present of a people.
These collective acts, without being set apart from daily life, are special celebrations where many distinct elements must be taken into account: music, dance, costume, mask, food, drink, theatrical representation, work, history…
Masked Dances of the Altiplano, by Manuel Vargas in Masks of the Bolivian Andes, Photographs: Peter McFarren, Sixto Choque, Editorial Quipos and BancoMercantil
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Posted in 2018, Art in general, Bolivia, Bolivianos, Photography, Travel
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Tags: "Masked Dances of the Altiplano Photographs: Peter McFarren", accessories, artistic performance, BancoMercantil, Bolivia, bound to the soil, celebrations, ceremonial act, character, civilizations, collective acts, collective life, conceal, costume, country, cultural expressions, daily life, dance, diversion, Editorial Quipos, externalization, flourished, history, La Paz, masks, meaning, Museum of Ethnography and Folklore, music, myth, people, present, religious, remembrance, represent, Sixto Choque, social ceremont, theatrical presentation
