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Jultagi, tightrope walking marks_1
  • Manage No, Sortation, Country, Writer ,Date, Copyright
    Manage No EE00000168
    Country Republic of Korea
    ICH Domain Performing Arts
    Address
    Jultagi is a traditional Korean form of entertainment featuring tightrope walking that has been performed at a variety of festivals and events across the country. This acrobatic performance is being most actively transmitted in Gyeonggi-do, where the Jultagi Safeguarding Association is located.
    Year of Designation 1976.06.16
Description [Inscribed in 2011 (6.COM) on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity] Jultagi, or tightrope walking, is a traditional Korean performing art. Tightrope walking refers to the art of not only walking, but singing, dancing or performing acrobatics, while narrating funny stories, on a single thin rope suspended between two points. Tightrope walking, however, is not a one-man show. The rope walker, called jul gwangdae, obviously is the centre of attention but he needs other artists collaborating on the ground, such as the musicians to accompany his acrobatic feats and funny narratives, and a clown to retort to his remarks or answer questions as a dialogue companion. Today, tightrope walking performers are frequently invited to local festivals that take place throughout the country particularly in spring and autumn. It is a good way to get people excited and laughing in festivals. Since almost all the local festivals host tightrope walking performance, it became one of the traditional performing arts the general public can readily access and feel familiar with. As a full-scale show lasts the whole afternoon, it has to be carefully organized with acrobatics, narratives and music to maintain the audience’s interest and stifle yawns. The tightrope walker starts with simpler feats, gradually moving to more difficult acrobatics such as bouncing up and down from the rope, tumbling and somersaulting, and sitting on the rope with his legs crossed. He displays some 40 different rope techniques. Between his feats he cracks jokes and sings songs while the audience catches its breath from the nail-biting manoeuvres. Tightrope walking, in this regard, is not a simple presentation of rope techniques but an age-old form of integrated performing arts and entertainment. The Korean traditional tightrope walking is distinguished from similar arts of other countries in that it is not all about demonstrating a series of rope techniques but proceeds with dialogue between the rope walker and the clown, who constantly interact with the audience. In other words, the Korean tightrope show is not a unilateral presentation of fun and thrill but two-way communication between the performers and spectators, where the participants can adjust the routine to the atmosphere of the show. The show is for the enjoyment of both the performers and spectators. And this is what makes Korean tightrope walking unique and significant.
Social and cultural significance The members of the safeguarding association are dedicated to raising awareness and promoting the traditional performing art. Tightrope walking is not an easy performance. The rope walker has to take the risk of falling down from the rope and being harmed, but all the players involved feel thrilled while doing or helping with daring feats on the rope. They also like the communication and dialogue with the audience happening all the time during the performance. Tightrope walking has a social and cultural meaning for both individual performers and the nation as a whole. This traditional performance is conducive to access by the general public and plays a role in strengthening the identity of Korea. Tightrope walking is frequently delivered at regional cultural festivals hosted by communities across the country. It takes place on an open stage, so spectators can experience the performance more freely. The heritage of tightrope walking dates back before the Goryeo Dynasty (918-1392), and has continued up through today. As the audience views the performance, it can develop a familiarity with traditional performing arts while enriching its Korean self-identity. Tightrope walking provides both performers and spectators with an opportunity to feel liberated. Although it is the form of a performance demanding refined technique, spectators do not simply watch, but become engaged and undergo a release of stress at the end of each exciting performance. The rope walker’s liberal dialogue and movements are transferred to the audience, leading them to experience a similar feeling. Thus, this traditional performing art offers an opportunity to experience a sense of internal freedom in an atmosphere delightful to all participants.
Transmission method The first known record of tightrope walking appears in the Goryeo period (918-1392), and it has been handed down to the present since then. Tightrope walking has been consistently a vital traditional performing art widely enjoyed by many people. A more systematic safeguarding and transmission was made possible by the designation of Jultagi by the government as important intangible cultural heritage in 1976. Currently, the Jultagi Safeguarding Association and Kim Dae-gyun, the living human treasure appointed by the government, are playing a leading role in the transmission of tightrope walking in Korea centers. Established in 1991, the Jultagi Safeguarding Association is a non-profit organization with the mission to safeguard and spread the traditional performing art. It has 17 members, each of them playing a role during the performance. There are two types of education for tightrope walking being led by the Jultagi Safeguarding Association: apprenticeship education and public education. Apprenticeship education is designed for members of the Association as masters educate practitioners and take on students in the form of an apprenticeship. In order to publicize the traditional tightrope walking heritage, public education is also carried out. Public heritage education takes various forms such as school training, experience classes, and summer camps. For example, in the school training programme in 2007, 14 students from Juksan Elementary School and 20 students from Gwacheon Elementary School undertook tightrope walking training. In 2008, ten students from Korea National University of Arts and students from Gwacheon Middle School received tightrope walking performance education. As can be seen, the traditional art of tightrope walking is being carried on both through apprenticeship education for members of the Jultagi Safeguarding Association and public education for ordinary citizens.
Community The Jultagi Safeguarding Association is the major group concerned. It has 17 permanent members, and at the center of it is Kim Dae-gyun, the living human treasure designated by the government as the master for Jultagi.
Type of UNESCO List Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity
Incribed year in UNESCO List 2011
Keyword
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