Get curated editors’ picks, peeks behind the scenes, film recommendations and more.
For captions describing each step of the process in this video, click the CC button at the bottom right of the video player.
Noh is a performance art that combines dance, instrumentation, poetry, acting and expert costuming – so it’s quite apropos that its name is derived from the Sino-Japanese word for ‘talent’. Dating back to the 14th century, it’s also thought to be perhaps the oldest surviving theatre tradition. Masks are a vital and distinctive aspect of Noh, used to transform performers into a variety of human and otherworldly creatures, but these props are traditionally devoid of facial expression. Instead, performers are tasked with communicating emotion through vocalisation and movement. This video from the YouTube channel Process X, which chronicles production processes across Japan, details the crafting of a traditional Noh mask. The artisan Nakamura Mitsue employs her four decades of experience as she cuts, carves and paints, gradually forging an eerily lifelike human face from a single block of wood.
Video by Process X
video
Nature and landscape
Take a serene hike through an ancient forest, inspired by a Miyazaki masterpiece
6 minutes
video
Design and fashion
The mundane becomes mesmerising in this deep dive into segmented displays
14 minutes
video
Physics
A song of ice, fire and jelly – exploring the physics and history of the trumpet
9 minutes
video
Architecture
Tour the European architecture that dreamed of a wondrous, fictitious China
16 minutes
video
Spirituality
Trek alongside spiritual pilgrims on a treacherous journey across Pakistan
6 minutes
video
Thinkers and theories
Photographs offer a colonialist window to the past – one that must be challenged
14 minutes
video
Animals and humans
An artist and ants collaborate on an exhibit of ‘tiny Abstract Expressionist paintings’
5 minutes
video
Mathematics
How a curious question about colouring maps changed mathematics forever
9 minutes
video
Cities
The rise and fall of Kowloon Walled City, Hong Kong’s infamous urban monolith
18 minutes