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DUKAS_187762876_NUR
Second Day Of Awa Odori 2025
In Tokushima, Japan, on August 13, 2025, a dancing group stops during their dance in a pose in sync with the music. (Photo by Marc Fernandes/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187751325_NUR
Awa Odori 2025
In Tokushima, Japan, on August 12, 2025, a group of dancers performs as lanterns are lit in the background. (Photo by Marc Fernandes/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854233_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854232_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854231_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854230_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854226_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854225_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854146_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854145_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854144_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854142_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854130_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_186854129_NUR
Motionhouse Performs WILD At Tollwood Festival In Munich
Dancers from the British company Motionhouse perform the outdoor dance-circus production ''WILD'' during the Tollwood Festival in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_07298339_FRI
BALINESE DANCER, PELIATAN VILLAGE, BALI, INDONESIA
Music and dance play an extremely important part in Balinese society. There are more than 200 different dances and over 2000 dance troupes. Nearly every village community has its own organization for the preservation and cultivation of traditional music and dance. The troupe from Peliatan is internationally famous. Its gifted dancers and musicians are simple farmers, taxi-drivers, wood-carvers and warung (shop)-keepers. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
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DUKAS_07298331_FRI
MASKED ACTOR, BATUBULAN VILLAGE,BALI, INDONESIA
The Balinese are gifted woodcarvers and born actors. This rice-farmer is rehearsing for the tradional drama called Topeng - which means "pressed against the face." The daily masked dances and plays put on for tourists are an additional source of income for the rural population. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07298273_FRI
BIRD MAN AND KECAK DANCERS IN FRONT OF TANAH LOT TEMPLE, BALI, INDONESIA
The mystic bird man is entering the circle of the kecak dancers. A kecak group in front of the temple of Tanah Lot at low tide. The waves have almost destroyed the rocky island, and it has to be supported with cleverly concealed concrete piles. The temple is a major tourist attraction and at the same time one of Bali's most sacred sites. Only Balinese may set foot on the island, and then only on festival days. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07298264_FRI
CREMATION, MEN CARRYING A COFFIN ALONG SANUR BEACH, BALI, INDONESIA
The men are carrying a coffin to the cremation place. It is a custom to carry the coffin through the village and all the places the deceased used to live. Here it is a fisherman and they carry him along the beach. The coffin is shaped like a white bull, the sign of a high caste, the body is consigned to the flames. Not until the mortal remains have been destroyed is the soul free and can ascend to heaven. Funerals and cremations are fun in Bali. They become a main attraction for tourists. The Balinese accept this and the bigger the show the better. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07298253_FRI
BARONG PROCESSION, BATUBULAN VILLAGE, BALI, INDONESIA
Rice and religion are inseparable on Bali. Once a year the villagers of Batabulan bring their barong, a fabulous, mystical creature symbolizing goodness, out of the temple. They carry him in a joyful procession through the rice-fields and down the river to the sea, where he is handsomely bedecked with votive gifts. Barong is a fictional character in the mythology of Bali. A mythical jungle beast, friend of the human beings, fighting against Rangda, queen of the witches, the evil. In Bali each region, each village of the island has his own Barong. The protective spirit for it's forests, lands and rice fields. During the year the Barong is stationed in his temple. Given food and attention. Several times of the year the Barong comes out of his temple and walks through the rice fields as an animal with four legs. Two adult men are slipping into the Barong and are dancing through the village and the rice fields. for the Balinese and even for the tourists the Barong is the most spectacular and important mask. He is the king of the spirits, leader of the hosts of good, and enemy of Rangda in the mythological tradition of Bali.
(FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07298243_FRI
BARONG PROCESSION THROUGH A RICE-FIELD, BATUBULAN VILLAGE, BALI, INDONESIA
Rice and religion are inseparable on Bali. Once a year the villagers of Batabulan bring their barong, a fabulous, mystical creature symbolizing goodness, out of the temple. They carry him in a joyful procession through the rice-fields and down the river to the sea, where he is handsomely bedecked with votive gifts. Barong is a fictional character in the mythology of Bali. A mythical jungle beast, friend of the human beings, fighting against Rangda, queen of the witches, the evil. In Bali each region, each village of the island has his own Barong. The protective spirit for it's forests, lands and rice fields. During the year the Barong is stationed in his temple. Given food and attention. Several times of the year the Barong comes out of his temple and walks through the rice fields as an animal with four legs. Two adult men are slipping into the Barong and are dancing through the village and the rice fields. for the Balinese and even for the tourists the Barong is the most spectacular and important mask. He is the king of the spirits, leader of the hosts of good, and enemy of Rangda in the mythological tradition of Bali. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07298242_FRI
BARONG PROCESSION THROUGH A RICE-FIELD, BATABULAN VILLAGE, BALI, INDONESIA
Rice and religion are inseparable on Bali. Once a year the villagers of Batubulan bring their barong, the fabulous, mystical creature symbolizing goodness, out of the temple. They carry him in a joyful procession through the rice-fields and down the river to the sea, where he is handsomely bedecked with votive gifts. Barong is a fictional character in the mythology of Bali. A mythical jungle beast, friend of the human beings, fighting against Rangda, queen of the witches, the eval. In Bali each region, each village of the island has his own Barong. The protective spirit for it's forests, lands and rice fields. During the year the Barong is stationed in his temple. Given food and attention. Several times of the year the Barong comes out of his temple and walks through the rice fields as an animal with four legs. Two adult men are slipping into the Barong and are dancing through the village and the rice fields. for the Balinese and even for the tourists the Barong is the most spectacular and important mask. He is the king of the spirits, leader of the hosts of good, and enemy of Rangda in the mythological tradition of Bali. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07298232_FRI
GROUP OF KECAK-CAK DANCERS OR MONKEY DANCERS, SINGAPADU VILLAGE,BALI, INDONESIA
Kecak-Cak or the Monkey Dance. The present-day form of this traditional trance-like dance was developed by the German artist Walter Spies for the film Island of the Spirits in the 1930s. The hundred or more men only move their torsos, arms and hands. With their rhythmic cries of Cak-ka-Cak this choir produces a fascinating wave of sound. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07298167_FRI
KECAK DANCE GROUP IN FRONT OF TANAH LOT TEMPLE, BALI, INDONESIA
A kecak dance group in front of the temple of Tanah Lot at low tide. The waves have almost destroyed the rocky island, and it has to be supported with cleverly concealed concrete piles. The temple is a major tourist attraction and at the same time one of Bali's most sacred sites. Only Balinese may set foot on the island, and then only on festival days. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07298341_FRI
LEGONG DANCING-GIRL, PELIATAN VILLAGE,BALI, INDONESIA
The Legong dancing-girls begin their training at the age of six. Every movement of each part of the body is precisely laid down. Every Balinese has a naturally erect and graceful bearing. Nearly every village community has its own organization for the preservation and cultivation of traditional music and dance. The troupe from Peliatan is internationally famous. Its gifted dancers and musicians are simple farmers, taxi-drivers, wood-carvers and warung (shop)-keepers.
(FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL -
DUKAS_07307398_FRI
YOUNG FOLK-DANCE GROUP, MÉRIDA, YUCATAN PENINSULA, MEXICO
MÉRIDA was the first Spanish settlement in Yucatán. Thanks to a boom in sisal it was one of the richest cities in Mexico until the 1930s - but after that it became one of the poorest. Only with the explosive development of tourism on the coasts of Yucatán has Mérida experienced a new commercial revival. Every Sunday, outside the town hall, folk-dance groups recall the good old, prosperous days. (FOTO: DUKAS/MICHAEL FRIEDEL)
DUKAS/FRIEDEL