J. Gafarot

J. Gafarot club

Posted: 11 Apr 2016


Taken: 11 May 2013

19 favorites     22 comments    1 112 visits

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masks
celebration
Lisbon
May
2013
Desfile
Mascaras


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Masks

Masks
A mask is an object normally worn on the face, typically for protection, disguise, performance, or entertainment. Masks have been used since antiquity for both ceremonial and practical purposes.
They are usually worn on the face, although they may also be positioned for effect elsewhere on the wearer's body. In parts of Australia, giant totem masks cover the body, whilst Inuit women use finger masks during storytelling and dancing.
The use of masks in rituals or ceremonies is a very ancient human practice across the world, although masks can also be worn for protection, in hunting, in sports, in feasts, or in wars – or simply used as ornamentation. Some ceremonial or decorative masks were not designed to be worn. Although the religious use of masks has waned, masks are used sometimes in drama therapy or psychotherapy.
The mask is normally a part of a costume that adorns the whole body and embodies a tradition important to the religious and/or social life of the community as whole or a particular group within the community. Masks are used almost universally and maintain their power and mystery both for their wearers and their audience.
(to be continued)

, Dimas Sequeira, Trudy Tuinstra, Bruno Suignard and 15 other people have particularly liked this photo


Latest comments - All (22)
 J. Gafarot
J. Gafarot club
Thank you Charles.
8 years ago.
 Anne-Marie(Minus)
Anne-Marie(Minus)
Etonnant ce masque en bois... mais belle image
8 years ago.
 J. Gafarot
J. Gafarot club has replied
C'est du chêne liège Anne-Marie. Je me permets de transcrire ce que j'ai dit à Ron un peu plus haut parce c'est une partie de l'histoire naturelle de nos champs, au sud du Tage.
It's simply the cork layer of the cork tree.
I assume it is 4 to 5 years old because it doesn't seem thick enough to be taken out normally. Perhaps it was a sick tree. For the the first "harvest" the tree must be 25 to 30 years old. After that you must wait 9 years between takes. There are about 2,200,000 hectares of cork forest worldwide; 34% in Portugal and 27% in Spain. Annual production is about 200,000 tons; 49.6% from Portugal, 30.5% from Spain, 5.8% from Morocco, 4.9% from Algeria, 3.5% from Tunisia, 3.1% Italy, and 2.6% from France. The cork is traditionally stripped from the trunks every nine years, with the first two harvests generally producing lower quality cork. The trees live for about 300 years.
Merci de votre visite.
8 years ago. Edited 8 years ago.
 Dimas Sequeira
Dimas Sequeira club
Simultaneamente toscas e sugestivas - fascínio garantido!
8 years ago.
 J. Gafarot
J. Gafarot club has replied
Obrigado caro Dimas.
7 years ago.

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