30 likes | 43 Views
Ayagasa Bokou2019s umbrella shape hearkens back to the festivalu2019s earliest 9th-century days, when the floats started as different kinds of halberds, banners and other tall pole-type instruments that could be carried.<br>This floatu2019s dynamic musical score features costumed members whirling and drumming simultaneously, a unique offering among the yamaboko. Itu2019s derived from nenbutsu odori, a 10th-century ritualistic performance wherein the beat of drums and bells accompanied dancing and Buddhist mantra chanting.
E N D
The Damask Umbrella Float Ayagasa Boko’s drapery features silk weaving of celestial beings, so finely executed that it looks painted–a tribute to Kyoto’s kimono weaving heritage.[/caption] Ayagasa Boko’s umbrella shape hearkens back to the festival’s earliest 9th-century days, when the floats started as different kinds of halberds, banners and other tall pole-type instruments that could be carried. This float’s dynamic musical score features costumed members whirling and drumming simultaneously, a unique offering among the yamaboko. It’s derived from nenbutsu odori, a 10th-century ritualistic performance wherein the beat of drums and bells accompanied dancing and Buddhist mantra chanting. Ayagasa Boko’s dance and music combination may be some of the most historically authentic of today’s festival: it resembles a 17th century painting of the Gion Festival on a folding screen owned by Kyoto’s Buddhist University. Due to evidence like this painting, some accounts argue that the Gion Festival historically included dance and ritual theater, as well as music.
Moreover, this dance and music combination easily evoke the shamanic roots of the festival music. Like most festivals, the Gion Festival was designed communicate humans and the supernatural – to placate vengeful spirits, welcome benevolent ones, or please the ones who could go either way. This could be considered what we call today a kind of shamanic journey or vision quest. most traditional to between Though this float is a recent incarnation (reestablished in 1979 after a century-long absence from the festival), it’s known to have existed for at least five centuries. Visit the treasure display on the small temple grounds to see a painting and model of the larger, wheeled Ayagasa float that burned down in the great fire of 1864.