Home/Culture/ Heritage

Folk artisan works on Nuo Opera masks

Updated: 2014-03-13 11:23 (Xinhua)
Comments

Folk artisan works on Nuo Opera masks

Photo taken on March 12, 2014 shows carving tools used by folk artisan Wang Rubin, who makes Nuo Opera masks, at his workshop in Enshi Tujia and Miao autonomous prefecture, Central China's Hubei province. Masks are a distinguishing feature of the Nuo Opera, an ancient folk drama which is still popular in many Chinese provinces along the Yangtze River. Nuo Opera performers are believed to gain the capability to communicate with deities once they wear their masks. In Enshi, the kind of Nuo Opera performed by the local Tujia people serves as both secular entertainment and a votive ritual. For more than two decades, Wang Rubin has been devoted to preserving and promoting mask-making techniques of the Enshi Nuo Opera, now a listed national intangible cultural heritage in China. So far, Wang has crafted over 1,000 Nuo Opera masks based on various theatrical and mythical characters.[Photo/Xinhua]

 

Folk artisan works on Nuo Opera masks

Folk artisan works on Nuo Opera masks

Folk artisan works on Nuo Opera masks

Behind mystic masks

Nuo dance - treasure of Maonan   ethnic group

Nuo Opera staged in E China's Jiangxi

Most Popular