Showing posts with label dancers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dancers. Show all posts

December 04, 2012

Stick Dancers or Bastoners: Anklet with Bells Detail

Bastoners or Stick dancers shoes detail


Catalan folklore feeds on ancient traditions lost in the common past of Mediterranean countries. Stick dance (Cat. Ball de Bastons) was documented for the first time in Catalonia in XII a.d. and then more frequently after XVIII but it has always been part of this region's history besides the fact that it came either from the Greeks, some parts of Asia or even other regions in Europe. The exact origin is uncertain. In the Basque country this dance is very extended as well for example and each region has their own peculiarities when it comes to dresses, sticks or ways of dancing. I am not going to enter into that. Maybe talking about Bastoners or stick dancers as they are today, organized in groups or colles as they have been for the last three centuries according to historical records is easier. To begin with, let me say that there are more than 100 colles all over Catalonia perhaps and about fifty are grouped under the direction of Coordinadora de Ball de Bastons de Catalunya. They all have their own history that is normally linked to the town or neighborhood in which they live. The feet you see in the image, adorned with bells (Cat. picarols) sewn into this piece of cloth called camal or turmellera belong to a stick dancer from a group called Bastoners de Gràcia. I have more pictures of this colla to be posted here. I just want to add for the moment that these colles may be made up of 8,10,12 or 16 dancers. One of them carries a flag with their symbols and the name of the group and usually they also have that name or badge embroidered in their clothes. They carry handkerchiefs around their necks and a colorful waistband over white pants and shirts. Besides they wear espadrilles (Cat. espardenyes). More to know soon.

Update 2025:

As the original post was short, I think some enhancement on the topic is necessary:


Living tradition


Catalan folklore carries echoes of shared Mediterranean customs, and the stick dance—Ball de Bastons—stands out as one of its most recognizable communal performances with local variants found across the region and beyond. As a collective ritualized “mock combat,” it blends rhythm, choreography, and symbolism to dramatize an encounter between two sides, while celebrating the skill and coordination of a tightly rehearsed group of dancers, or colla.

Origins and debates


The origins of Ball de Bastons are debated, with hypotheses that point to ancient Greek roots, prehistoric agrarian rites, or evolutions from medieval sword dances rather than a single traceable source. A frequently cited milestone places a stick dance at the 1150 wedding banquet of Berenguer IV and Peronella of Aragon, often portrayed as the earliest documented mention of the tradition in Catalonia, though the link between that event and the modern form remains uncertain. More critical scholarship highlights a firmer documentary reference from 1558 in Tortosa and cautions that mid‑20th‑century retellings overstated the 1150 claim, reminding readers that “first mentions” can be tricky in oral, popular arts.

Across Europe and Iberia


Ball de Bastons belongs to a wider family of European stick and weapon dances, with relatives such as the cossiers in Majorca, pauliteiros in Portugal, palotiau in Aragón, ezpatadantza in the Basque Country, and Spanish paloteo or troqueado, illustrating a shared vocabulary of percussive movement using short wooden sticks. This kinship helps explain why stylistic elements feel familiar across borders, even as Catalan colles maintain distinctive music, dress, and figures tied to local communities. The Barcelona scene is especially rich, with numerous active groups and a dense calendar of popular festivals that give the dance public visibility throughout the year.

What a colla looks like


Today’s Bastoners are organized in colles with their own badges, flags, and histories linking them to a town, neighborhood, or cultural center, and they typically perform in a coordinated set throughout a festa program or dedicated bastoner gathering. The Coordinadora de Ball de Bastons de Catalunya connects dozens of groups across the country and supports diffusion, preservation, and events that keep the tradition vibrant. As a national‑scope association, the Coordinadora has played a key role since the 1980s, and Catalan reference sources note around 90 registered colles alongside many intermittent or occasional groups.

Group sizes and formations


A classic set often fields 8 to 16 dancers arranged in two ranks, though other configurations—squares, circles, or extended lines—appear depending on local choreography and the figures selected for the performance. Variants in some exhibitions can scale further to 20 or 24, especially at ceremonial parades where multiple lines perform in coordinated blocks. Many colles carry a small standard or banner, and one dancer may raise it to mark a climax or the end of a piece, reinforcing the group’s identity in the public square.

Music and rhythm


Ball de Bastons is powered by crisp, driving melodies often built on straightforward duple meters, typically felt in 2/4, which support the precise accents of stick‑on‑stick clashes and the dancers’ steps. The instrumental nucleus varies by area, but traditional timbres such as the gralla (shawm), flabiol (tabor pipe), and tamborí are common in Catalonia, creating a bright sonic profile that carries outdoors. The interplay between percussive sticks and melodic lines gives the dance its distinctive energy: the eye follows the figures while the ear tracks the cross‑rhythms of wood and wind.

Costume and symbols


Aesthetics matter in Ball de Bastons, where color coding often distinguishes the two “sides” of the encounter through scarves, sashes, and short overskirts that signal role and lineage. White shirts and trousers, a colored waistband, and espardenyes are typical, with a handkerchief at the neck and, crucially, bells sewn onto anklets—the camalls or turmelleres—so the footwork itself adds sparkle to the soundscape. The bells, known as picarols, transform leg movement into audible punctuation, which is beautifully captured in the close‑up of the dancer’s ankles from the Gràcia group that inspired this piece.

  • White base garments, with colored sash and neckerchief tied to the colla’s palette.
  • Camalls or turmelleres with picarols, turning steps into rhythmic accents.
  • Espardenyes suited to street performance and quick, grounded footwork.
  • A small flag or banderí borne by one dancer to emblemize the group.

Bastoners de Gràcia


The feet in the original image belong to a member of the Bastoners de Gràcia, a colla rooted in the Vila de Gràcia with deep ties to the neighborhood’s cultural centers and festive calendar. Founded in the early 1980s, with a first public performance in May 1982, the group has built a repertoire that draws on Catalan tradition as well as some Basque melodies and figures, showcasing the cross‑regional dialogue common in stick‑dance families. Their outfit features a red headscarf, a red faldellí with double black trim, a crossed checkered scarf, black or red sash, camalls with twelve bells, and circular alzina (holm oak) sticks, giving them a vivid and well‑documented visual signature on the streets of Gràcia.

Where to see them


In Barcelona, the Bastoners are highly visible, with 11 active colles in the city’s region and a signature Matí Bastoner every 24 September during La Mercè, the city’s major festival. Gràcia’s Festa Major is another natural home for stick dance processions, where the Bastoners de Gràcia perform alongside giants, devils, and the neighborhood dragon in a parade of popular arts that fills the streets and squares with music and color. Appearances by the Gràcia group have also reached beyond the barrio, including selected years at La Mercè and even the opening of the 1982 FIFA World Cup, a testament to how bastoner choreography adapts to large stages while keeping community roots.

Choreography and “mock combat”


A Ball de Bastons set reads like stylized conflict: two ranks face each other and advance, retreat, and cross in patterns that create anticipation before the sticks meet in crisp, rehearsed sequences. The “fight” is symbolic, with color‑coded sides and fixed figures that translate into public storytelling rather than improvisation, ensuring safety and clarity in crowded plazas. Within that framework, local steps, turns, and stick‑clash cadences differentiate one colla’s style from another, making neighborhood performances both recognizable and personal.

Craft and materials


Sticks are traditionally made of hard local woods like alzina (holm oak), which stand up to repeated impact and provide a satisfying, resonant crack when struck. Typical lengths hover in the 40–50 cm range with a comfortable thickness for secure grip and audible contact, though dimensions vary with local practice and specific figures. The tactile feel of well‑seasoned sticks, combined with the bounce and ring of bells from the camalls, is part of the dance’s multisensory appeal in close quarters on neighborhood streets.

Women in bastoner culture


Once restricted to men, Ball de Bastons has opened over the decades, and since the 1960s women have become steadily more visible, reshaping colla composition and the broader public image of the dance. This shift reflects both the vitality of popular culture and the organizational efforts of coordinators and colles to sustain the tradition by welcoming all who want to learn and perform. Today, audiences will encounter mixed groups throughout Catalonia, including in Barcelona’s most emblematic festival spaces.

Organization and continuity


The Coordinadora de Ball de Bastons de Catalunya brings together over 50 colles and facilitates meetings, training, and dissemination, creating a shared infrastructure for what is arguably the most widespread dance across Catalonia today. Catalan reference works estimate around 90 registered groups in recent tallies, while also noting many occasional colles that mobilize for specific events or anniversaries in their towns. This dual reality—stable year‑round teams alongside ad hoc formations—helps explain why Ball de Bastons remains omnipresent in local festa programs from the Pyrenees to the coast.

Learning and workshops


Beyond performances, training matters: workshops and formations organized within the bastoner community transmit technique, repertoire, and safe practice to new generations and curious neighbors. Such sessions cover core figures, stick handling, footwork, and the etiquette of ensemble movement, ensuring that the choreography remains legible in public spaces where dancers must adapt to uneven surfaces and dense crowds. The result is a living school spread across cultural centers, community halls, and plazas, rather than a single formal academy.

Gràcia’s bells, up close


Returning to the original photograph, the picarols sewn to the camalls are not mere decoration but an integral acoustic layer that tracks the dancer’s footwork beat by beat. The image from the Bastoners de Gràcia captures how the bells frame each step, translating ankle action into an audible shimmer that rides above the gralla and flabiol and ties the choreography together through sound as well as sight.

A tradition in motion


Ball de Bastons is both resolutely local and broadly Mediterranean, balancing the recognizable codes of a shared European stick‑dance family with the strong identities of Catalan colles and their neighborhood ties. Whether at La Mercè’s Matí Bastoner, Festa Major de Gràcia, or a small‑town meeting far from Barcelona, the clack of holm‑oak sticks, the bright call of the gralla, and the jingle of picarols announce a tradition that thrives by making the street its stage. In that soundscape, those anklets from Gràcia do more than shine—they ring out the living pulse of a dance that continues to gather people in step, in time, and in community.

September 27, 2010

Catalan Pubilla and Dancing Partner

Pubilla dancing

There was a very similar image in Barcelona Photoblog of a young maiden or pubilla dancing in Monistrol, a town at the foot of Montserrat mountain. In that old post I explained what a pubilla or an hereu are and I also talked about the dance and garments. As the previous picture had a vintage effect (kind of daguerreotype), in this one I preserved colors for you to compare.

August 27, 2010

Dancing Jota in Barcelona

Dancing Jota in Barcelona [enlarge]

Before resuming my photography walks in Barcelona and to fill the inevitable void of August holidays I bring back another sample of jotas from Aragon. Please check previous posts to learn more.

PS: Today I started a new set at Flickr about our trip to Scotland. It just has one picture but it will grow in the next days. From here, congratulations to Scots, in spite of the rain, you have the heck of a great landscape which my family and I really enjoyed and certainly recommend.

May 14, 2010

Flamenco Fusion Dancer, La Barceloneta, Barcelona

Bailora de Flamenco - Flamenco dancer at La Barceloneta

Dancing to the sound of a small flamenco fusion group, here is an artist caught in the very act of expressing her passion with her body. I took several pictures and it was difficult to decide which one was the most dramatic and evocative. I think her frown, her concentration and the hands up in the air finally made me choose this one. The bailaora was really more beautiful in other shots but I preferred to show her wrath, strength and plasticity. This took place at Passeig Maritim de la Barceloneta.

Update: Barcelona Photoblog's picture "Legs" has been selected in Photo Friday - Noteworthy section as part of weekly challenge called "Sexy". Thanks so much to all voters and to Photo Friday for the opportunity!

April 21, 2010

Belly Dancer in Barcelona

Belly Dancer in Barcelona

As I don't want to be accused by adepts and opponents alike because of my ignorance in this matter I prefer to leave you the link to the Wikipedia article explaining what belly dance is, the Western and the Eastern approach as well its different variants. Dancing is beyond the purpose of Barcelona Photoblog although many of the different belly dancing schools in the city well deserve some promotion. Come to think of it, I don't have any particular preference so why don't you check all there is to it at World Belly Dance or on Belly Dance Superstars. The only thing I can tell you is that watching it from a short distance is fascinating and hypnotic.

March 15, 2010

Bollywood Dance in Barcelona

Bollywood Dance in Barcelona [enlarge]

To resume the dancers series from previous posts here are these young ladies doing the Bollywood dance. This is a topic I am not good at so I will let you watch the photograph and maybe leave a link here to a Bollywood dance video. As the flamenco or the hip-hop images this one took place at an audition in La Masia cultural center in Nou Barris. Enjoy the new week.

February 28, 2010

Hip-Hop Dancer, Barcelona

Hip-Hop Dancer, Barcelona [enlarge]

My daughter's young hip-hop teacher during a performance in La Masia cultural center in Nou Barris. I couldn't know less about hip-hop being from the old school and born in 63 but I have to admit that movements rock and look swell in a photograph. The most interesting thing was not in isolated frames (come too think of it if it weren't for the clothes and shoes there is no hint of hip hop in this shot) but in the full series: hip-hop dancer.

February 22, 2010

Flamenco Dancer: Hands

Flamenco dancer's hands

Flamenco artist during an audition at La Masia de la Guineueta, a cultural institution in Parc Central de Nou Barris. I was there to see my daughter dance, not in this category but in hip-hop and I was sitting in the first row. I took some more pictures that I will probably show soon. Look at the hands and the elegant pose. Such beautiful back and shoulders she has! Happy entering in the new week.

October 12, 2009

Catalan Dance - Pubilla and Hereu

Catalan Folk Dance of Pubilles and Hereus

Some time ago families with no sons considered their first born daughter to be their heiress. In case there were several daughters, the pubilla, as so was called the heiress, would keep three thirds of the family's patrimony leaving the rest for her sisters. She had the right to change her descendants' last name in order not to lose their family name. But, if the child was a male, he was automatically considered to be the hereu (heir). There was no room for gender equalities back then and the topic unfortunately lingers in our modern societies.

Nowadays although the tradition is gone, cultural organizations in Catalonia support the appointment of pubillas and hereus to officially represent their town in a symbolic way. The chosen ones participate in public activities as such and it is really an honor for them. 

Being a pubilla or an hereu only happens once and it will last just one year. As to my image which was taken at Monistrol de Montserrat near Barcelona, I would like to say that I was instantly trapped in the magic of the pose, the arm, the fishnet gloves (mitenes) and the hair net (gallana). These two elements are also part of the traditional Catalan dress so they may be just dancers but I wanted to talk about Catalan traditions. 

I hope you like the old photo effect to give it some historic mood.

July 05, 2009

Maori Lady Dancing at Port Aventura

Maori Girl Dances at Port Aventura [enlarge]

A maori girl dancing under the sun at Port Aventura amusement park, her dress flashing with colors and her hands waving gently at the sound of traditional music. I have always wondered how they manage to have such wonderful looking skin all year long considering they are living in Catalonia. It must be something in their genes I guess. Anyway, if you visit the park don't miss their show, it is a must-see.

Update and correction: Thanks to the kind observation by Amy of Maungaturoto Daily Photo, New Zealand, the lady is definitely a Polinesian dancer. In fact, if I am not in a mistake this show was called Aloha Tahiti and the whole theme area of the park is called Polinesia! Either I have to quit on booze or take a good rest and stop writing my posts so late at night. The only explanation I can find to this terrible mistake is that the dance, specially the men's dance looks very similar to a maori dance at least to the European eye. As my intention is to inform and not to misinform I am happy someone like Amy helped me with this one.

November 08, 2008

Dancers Holding Hands

Dancers Holding Hands

Catalan folk dancers holding hands dressed as the heir or hereu and heiress or pubilla during a performance at Monistrol de Montserrat. Rather than the whole body I thought the detail of the hands holding tight would make the scene more poetic. Although this image was taken in October this year, there are similar posts published in the past. Check them here: Dancers and Catalan Folk Dance Troupe

September 27, 2008

Street Dancing in Barcelona

Street Dancing in Barcelona [enlarge]

Frozen in time. Do you remember the Matrix? You know, the bullet scene and all. I wish I could change the perspective here and show you the street dancer from different angles. If you like street dancing, hip hop, want to see a freeze or are just curious about the image, please visit previous post: Urban Street Dance in Barcelona.

Photographer's corner: Advanced Photography Tips

September 14, 2008

Urban Street Dance in Barcelona

Urban Street Dance in Barcelona

And this is what the street dancer in yesterday's post was looking at, one member of his crew performing a freeze. Here is a video with a basic freeze guide. Please don't try this at home.

May 31, 2008

Maori Warrior at Port Aventura Amusement Park, Salou, Spain

Maori Warrior at Port Aventura Amusement Park, Salou, Spain [enlarge]

You know what maybe the tourist in last post was lucky after all. Maybe if you didn't dance dressed like that for the crowd you would receive severe punishment for such great dishonor and you would have to face this. The scary look and the menacing gestures of a maori warrior. Man, imagine landing on the beautiful island a long time ago and being approached by a group of such warriors performing the famous dance. Wow, now I know how it must feel before the rugby match.

May 30, 2008

Maori Girls Dancing With Guest in Port Aventura

Maori Girls Dancing With Guest in Port Aventura [enlarge]

This young man saved us all from being randomly chosen by these beautiful maori girls at Port Aventura Amusement Park in Salou, Spain. I mean, who hasn't dreamed of being on a desert island, surrounded by maori girls and all...but that doesn't mean you have to dress like a scarecrow for the joy of the crowd. Tourists!!!

May 10, 2008

Sardanas at Barcelona Cathedral

Sardanas: A Traditional Catalan Dance

Elders gather in front of Barcelona Cathedral to engage in a traditional Catalan dance called Sardana.

May 01, 2008

Tango Dancers II, Ramblas, Barcelona, Spain

Tango Dancers, Ramblas, Barcelona, Spain [enlarge]

I am not too talkative today and besides an image sometimes speaks for itself. You all know what tango is. I only have to say that you can watch dancers like this couple at Las Ramblas in Barcelona. By the way this is the second time they appear in my blog, see the previous snap which is very similar although less contrasty: Tango Dancers in Las Ramblas I

April 27, 2008

Can Can Girls at Far West Saloon, Port Aventura, Spain

Can Can Girls at Far West Saloon, Port Aventura, Spain [enlarge]

After a long journey through all attractions in Port Aventura amusement park, the best way to rest is choosing one of the many shows available. The Far West area is for me one of the most complete and genuine. This is a picture I took in the saloon where these beautiful girls were dancing can can ("The can-can (also spelled cancan or Can Can) is regarded today primarily as a physically demanding music hall dance, performed by a chorus line of female dancers who wear costumes with long skirts, petticoats, and black stockings, harking back to the fashions of the 1890s. The main features of the dance are the lifting up and manipulation of the skirts, with high kicking and suggestive, provocative body movements. The cancan first appeared in the working-class ballrooms of Montparnasse in Paris in around 1830. It was a more lively version of the galop, a dance in quick 2/4 time, which often featured as the final figure in the quadrille. The cancan was, therefore, originally a dance for couples, who indulged in high kicks and other gestures with arms and legs. It is thought that they were influenced by the antics of a popular entertainer of the 1820s, Charles Mazurier, who was well known for his acrobatic performances, which included the grand écart or jump splits—later a popular feature of the cancan. At this time, and throughout most of the 19th century in France, the dance was also known as the chahut. Both words are French, cancan meaning "tittle-tattle" or "scandal", hence a scandalous dance, while chahut meant "noise" or "uproar"." Wikipedia). Suggestions: Try to finish your drink before the show ends cause the house is emptied so the next group of people standing in line comes in.

March 09, 2008

High Heels - Dancers in Barcelona Streets

High Heels - Dancers in Barcelona Streets [enlarge]

Barcelona carnival was over last month but I still have some dancers in stock. Not knowing how to entitled this post I ended up choosing the obvious, those elegant high heels the girl balanced with latin grace.

Useful Link of the Day: 17000+ Photoshop tutorials

December 29, 2007

Ecuadorian Dancers Wearing Traditional Costumes

Ecuadorian Dancers Wearing Traditional Costumes [enlarge]

These dancers wearing traditional costumes of Ecuador were part of an event organized in Nou Barris quarter some months ago. The picture I recovered from my archives since I forgot to show you in this previous post called Bolivian dancers.
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