During Samburu wedding celebrations,married women congregate apart from the warriors and young girls to sing in praise of the couple and to dance.
Oferta introductoria
Obtener 50% de descuento cuando se une a nuestra lista de correo electrónico
-
Resolución de Internet
515×550px
18.2×19.4cm 28ppcm
-
Baja resolución
820×875px
29.0×30.9cm 28ppcm
-
Mediana resolución
1815×1937px
15.4×16.4cm 118ppcm
-
Alta resolución
5144×5490px
43.6×46.5cm 118ppcm
* Precio final basado en el uso, no en el tamaño del archivo.
Palabras clave relacionadas
- 862-
- aborigen
- adulto
- África
- africano (hombre y mujer)
- africano (lugares y cosas)
- africano (perteneciente a Africa)
- AWL Images
- bailar
- baile tradicional
- cadena
- cadena (joyería)
- cantar
- casamiento
- celebración
- ceremonia
- ceremonia nupcial
- collar
- color brillante
- cuenta
- cultura
- decoración
- elaborado
- festivo
- fotógrafia
- fotografía (arte)
- fotógrafias
- gente
- grupo de personas
- imagen a color
- indígena
- joya
- joyería
- keniano
- Kenya
- mujer
- niña
- ornamentado
- pulsera
- ritual
- ropa tradicional
- sacar fotos
- Samburu
- tradición
- tribal
- vibrante
Imágenes relacionadas
- During Samburu wedding celebrations,warriors resplendent with long Ochred braids dance with young girls who have put on all their finery for the occasion. Both warriors and girls smear their faces,necks and shoulders with red ochre mixed with animal fat to enhance their appearance. Two spears are tipped with ostrich-feather pompoms.
- The invited guests at a Samburu wedding gather together to sing in praise of the couple and to dance. Celebrations will go on late into the night.
- During Samburu wedding celebrations,married women congregate apart from the warriors and young girls to sing in praise of the couple and to dance.
- Song is an art form ingrained in Turkana culture. At the end of a dance session,the participants invariably enjoy the Song of the Bulls. Each young man will take centre-stage to extol the praises of his favourite ox. He will explain how it came into his possession,its distinguishing traits and with outstretched arms,imitate the shape of its horns.
- Song is an art form ingrained in Turkana culture. After months of separation,young men and girls gather together during the rains when grass is abundant and life is relatively easy for a while. The Turkana have a rich repertoire of at least twenty dances,most of which are quite energetic.
- Gabbra women sing and dance to celebrate a wedding. The traditional metal ornamentation on their heads is called malmal.
- Gabbra women dance at a gathering in the village of Kalacha. The Gabbra are a Cushitic tribe of nomadic pastoralists living with their herds of camels and goats around the fringe of the Chalbi Desert.
- Kenya, Samburu District. A tourist attempting to jump as high as a Samburu warrior, in the dry river bed of the Ewaso Nyiro.
Más imágenes relacionadas
- Kenya, Samburu District. Samburu warriors and young girls sing and dance in the dry river bed of the Ewaso Nyiro River.
- Young Samburu girls dance during a wedding celebration. By arching their backs and thrusting out their chests,they flick their beaded necklaces up and down while dancing silently to the songs of the warriors. Their bodies and necklaces have been smeared with red ochre.
- A young Samburu girl dances during a wedding celebration. By arching her back and thrusting out her chest,she flicks her beaded necklaces up and down while dancing silently to the songs of the warriors. Her body and necklace have been smeared with red ochre,and her eyebrows blackened with charcoal dust mixed with animal fat.
- A lively Nyangatom dance is enjoyed by villagers in the late afternoon.The elevated houses in the background are both homes and granaries, which have been built to withstand flooding when the Omo River bursts its banks The Nyangatom are one of the largest tribes and arguably the most warlike people living along the Omo River in Southwest Ethiopia.
- Maasai girls gather to celebrate a wedding. Their broad beaded necklaces with predominantly white glass beads mark then as Kisongo Maasai,the largest clan group of the tribe which lives either side of the Kenya-Tanzania border.
- Karo men excel in body art. Before a dance, they will decorate their faces and torsos elaborately using local white chalk, pulverised rock and other natural pigments. While older men style their hair with clay, young men prefer to braid theirs.Every man carries a wooden stool, which doubles as a pillow at night.The Karo are a small tribe living in three main villages along the lower reaches of the
- A Dassanech man in full tribal regalia participates in a dance during a month long ceremony. He wears a cheetah skin draped on his backs and a black ostrich feather headdress. He dances holding a long stick and a simulated shield.His face is smeared with mud giving him a singular appearance.
- Men and women dance during a month long Dassanech ceremony. The men wear leopard, cheetah or serval cat skins draped on their backs and black ostrich feather headdresses. The women, dressed in skins, hang a single black and white colobus monkey skin down their backs.