

The first thing you notice about the Fallas festival is the city's willingness to more or less close down for the duration. At least a dozen streets making up the whole centre of the city were cordoned off and most of the shops were closed.

Pageantry forms a big part of the event - locals dress in clothes from different eras of the city's history to parade through the streets.

Each member of the parade carries flowers to take to the cathedral at Plaza Virgen.

A great many marching bands are also involved.

As the parade reaches the central square, each participant leaves a bunch of flowers which is used to make up a strikingly-rendered veneration of the Madonna and Child. And to think Nordies hanging off 12 July pyres is all Ireland has by comparison!

The seal on the Virgin Mary's back changes each year - in 2007 it was a dove.

It is obvious even from the street that the event is a highly mediatised one. However, with some exceptions, there is an admirable lack of commercial logos along the route.
It's impossible not to notice the ninots, or papier maché sculptures, satirising local politicians that border the parade route. Apparently they are set on fire at the end of the Fallas festival.

Once the parade has passed the Plaza Virgen, the mood lightens completely. The bands start playing upbeat tunes and jumping around the street jazzy-style.

The line between participant and parade-watcher gets blurred as well.

Proceedings keep on going out to the suburbs after the main parade finishes.
1 comment:
i like the photo-essay style you picked for this. it seems like you did a lot of research about fallas - the journalist strikes again!
here's a link to the wikipedia article about the burning of zozobra, the autumnal tradition that mildly resembles the effigy burnings at fallas.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zozobra
Post a Comment