Performing arts (such as traditional music, dance and theatre)
- In the text of the Convention
Scope and Content
The expressions central to the performing arts include especially vocal or instrumental music, dance, and theatre, but there are indeed many other traditional forms such as pantomime, sung verse, and certain forms of storytelling. Performing arts include a diversity of cultural expressions that together testify to human creativity and that are also found in different degree in many other domains of intangible heritage.
Urtiin Duu - Traditional Folk Long Song
© Sonom-Ish Yundenbat
Music is of course the most often encountered of the performing arts, found in every society and in most cases an integral part of other performing art forms and other domains of ICH such as rituals, festive events, or oral traditions. We find it in the most diverse contexts: profane or sacred, classical or popular, closely connected to work, entertainment, even politics and economics that may call upon music to recount a people’s past, sing the praises of a powerful person, or accompany or facilitate commercial transactions. The occasions on which it is performed are equally varied: marriages, funerals, rituals and initiations, festivities, all kinds of entertainment, or other social practices.
Dance may be described simply as ordered bodily expression, often with musical accompaniment, sung or instrumental. Apart from its physical aspect, the rhythmic movements, steps, or gestures of dance often serve to express a sentiment or mood or to illustrate a specific event or daily act, such as religious dances or those depicting hunting, warfare, or even sexual activities.
Traditional theatre performances often combine acting, singing, dance and music, dialogue, narration or recitation, but also include puppetry of all kinds as well as pantomime. These arts should perhaps not only be thought of as “performances” like those on a stage. In fact, many traditional music practices are not carried out for an external audience, such as songs accompanying agricultural work or music that is part of a ritual. In a more intimate setting, lullabies are sung to help a baby sleep.
In its definition of intangible heritage, the Convention includes the instruments, objects, artefacts and cultural spaces that are associated with intangible expressions and practices. In the performing arts, this includes for example musical instruments, masks, costumes and other body ornaments used in dance, and the scenery and props of theatre. Performing arts are often performed in specific places; when such spaces, built or natural, are closely linked to those expressions, we may speak of cultural spaces in the Convention’s terms.
Some examples
The Samba de Roda of Recôncavo of Bahia
© Luiz Santoz / UNESCO
These examples are selected from the 90 Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity proclaimed in 2001, 2003 and 2005.
- The Samba de Roda of Recôncavo of Bahia (Brazil) derives from the dances and cultural traditions of the region’s slaves of African origin, incorporating as well elements of Portuguese culture, particularly the language and poetic forms. This local genre has influenced the development of the urban samba, which became in the twentieth century an essential symbol of Brazilian national identity.
- The Azerbaijani Mugham is a classical music tradition that reflects the tumultuous history of that country. Characterized by a high degree of improvisation, it resists being transcribed in fixed form. Multiple versions are transmitted by masters who train students in the arts of interpretation and improvisation.
- The Mbende Jerusarema Dance (Zimbabwe) is characterized by acrobatic and sensual movements, accompanied by polyrhythmic percussion. A source of pride during the struggle against colonial rule, the dance imitates the motions of the mole, for the Shona people a symbol of fertility, sexuality and family.
- Kutiyattam, Sanskrit Theatre (India), is one of that country’s most ancient traditions, a synthesis of Sanskrit classicism and local Kerala traditions. In its stylized and codified theatrical language, gestures and eye expressions are prominent, expressing the thoughts and feelings of the characters. Traditionally enacted in the sacred space of temples, Kutiyattam performances always include an oil lamp on stage to symbolise a divine presence.
- The Wayang Puppet Theatre (Indonesia), nurtured for ten centuries in the royal courts of Java and Bali, is an ancient form of storytelling. Puppets are articulated, typically of flat leather or carved wood and cloth, manipulated by a puppeteer to the accompaniment of dialogue, singing, and a musical ensemble (the gong-chime ensemble known as gamelan).
- Slovácko Verbuňk, Recruit Dances (Czech Republic) are traditionally danced by men of all ages. Not bound to a precise choreography, the dances are instead marked by spontaneity and individual expression, and by acrobatic contests. Their structural complexity and variety of movements make Slovácko Verbuňk a cultural expression of great artistic value, expressing the cultural identity and diversity of the region.
Challenges to viability
Many performing arts today face multiple threats. As cultural practices are standardized, the practices of precious arts are abandoned, while at the same time increased popularity may benefit only certain expressions, jeopardizing their integrity or irreversibly disrupting the very essence of the tradition.
Music offers perhaps the best example of this, in the phenomenon that is called World Music. Despite the cultural exchange it encourages and the creativity that enriches the international artistic scene, the World Music market is problematic because of its standardizing and distorting effects. It often leaves little place for the key elements of certain musical practices that are crucial in the process of transmission within the concerned communities.
Many traditions of music, dance, and theatre figure into cultural promotion as tourist attractions, included for example in the itineraries of tour operators. Although this may bring revenues to a country or community and offer a window onto its culture, it is not uncommon that such processes create new forms of presenting the performing arts that are abbreviated, losing certain elements important to the tradition, and may turn a traditional form into mere entertainment.
In other cases, seemingly unrelated phenomena can profoundly affect the viability of a tradition. Thus, environmental degradation such as deforestation can deprive a musical tradition of the wood needed to make traditional instruments.
Further, it has often been noted that many musical traditions that once had musical scales diverging from western music have been adapted to music notation and formal education. Such processes of musical homogenization often result in the loss of knowledge linked to the tonal subtleties of a given music or dance, or needed for making instruments, as for example a string instrument when the introduction of frets fundamentally changes the instrument.
Some safeguarding examples
Khazan Rajabiy, Master of maqoms, during a masterclass
©Otanazar Mat’yakubov
Safeguarding measures for traditional performing arts should focus primarily on transmission and strengthening the relations of master and apprentice. Measures should reinforce the links between master and apprentice and ensure their future, strengthening the transmission of knowledge and techniques of playing or making instruments, the subtleties of a song, the movements of a dance or a theatrical interpretation. To this end, “Master Classes” are often organized, as for the
Shashmaqom Music (Tajikistan, Uzbekistan), the
Sosso Bala (Guinea) or the
Drametse Ngacham, a sacred mask dance in Bhutan. Transmission activities may be integrated into school curricula, as for example for the
Tumba Francesa in Cuba.
Another field of action is that of inventorying, researching, documenting and archiving. Countless sound recordings are stored in archives and collections around the world, dating back a century or more. Often threatened by deterioration, these need to be digitized, which allows at the same time inventorying existing documents. For the
Mugam of Azerbaijan, support to the National Archives seeks to ensure that the recordings provide a source of inspiration, training and knowledge to new generations of musicians.
In the particular case of the performing arts, a crucial role can be played by cultural media, institutions and industries in developing audiences and raising awareness among the general public. Such campaigns can inform the audience about the various aspects of an expression, allowing it to gain a new and broader popularity. In some cases, they can even help to cultivate connoisseurship and prepare audiences to carry out an active participation in the performance itself.
In order to ensure sustained safeguarding, the various fields of action presented here often call for increased capacity building, in particular in training staff. In
Georgia, for example, students are trained in fieldwork methods and recording of polyphonies, while at the same time laying the basis of an inventory through creating a database. In Ethiopia an ambitious research and training project is underway to collect traditional music, dance and instruments across the country, and to support the creation of a university curriculum in the field of ethnomusicology.
Last update: 2007-10-25 23:05:10