Bench dance comes from the daily production and life of Buyi people and is full of national characteristics. In the past, during the holidays, Buyi people would wear Buyi costumes and dance on the bench with a small bench to celebrate the festival or entertain themselves. The dance takes the sound of kicking the bench as the rhythm of the dance, and expresses the actions of transplanting rice, fertilizing, weeding, harvesting and threshing rice in farm production through the original ecological dance form, which means good luck, good weather and abundant crops. Women show their charm and simplicity, while men show their steadiness and diligence.
Ji Bo's painting
The dustpan painting is a specialty of Duzhai Village, a Buyi township in Xincheng, which originated from the daily life of Buyi people. In ancient times, Buyi people used a dustpan to hold rice cakes, that is, they made the prepared rice cakes into squares and circles, or kneaded them into figures, animals, flowers and other shapes, put them in the dustpan, and then sprinkled various food pigments on the surface of the rice cakes to take out the dyed rice cakes, so various rice cakes appeared in the dustpan. In the mid-1980s, villagers Luo and Wei Fuzhong of Duzhai Formation began to lead the dustpan painting to the road of artistic development. They use exaggerated and distorted techniques to describe the folk customs, fairy tales, customs and life scenes of Buyi people with brushes. Their composition is free and unrestrained, and their imagination is bold and rich, gradually forming their own unique artistic style.
Rattle stick dance
In the 1990s, the Bangbang Dance of the Miao nationality in Xiaba Kabao was once the representative of the national folk dance in Wudang District and even Guiyang City. He has participated in many large-scale cultural and sports competitions in provinces and cities and won awards, and has performed in Beijing, Tianjin, Nanjing, Shanghai, Kunming and Shenzhen. With its enthusiastic and cheerful music and unrestrained dance, Bangwu has attracted experts, scholars and tourists from the United States, Britain, the Netherlands, Japan, Hongkong, Taiwan Province Province and other countries and regions to come to Kabao Miao Village for investigation, sightseeing and collecting wind. During 1997, when the flower stick dance was invited to perform in Singapore, it won applause and praise from foreign audiences and won the reputation of "Oriental Disco".