Sagot :
Answer:
Line: Wooden Carvings of Paper
Shape: The figure stands on a squarish hourglass-shaped base representing a stylized rice mortar. A Bul'ul has a simplified shape of a human being, whether male or female.
Form: The Bu'lul has a simplified form
Color: The Bu'lul is touched by hands dipped in the blood of a chicken or pig in a ritual called tunod during the rice planting season. Over time the blood imparts a dark color to the figures, overlaid with a patina of grease from food offerings.
Value: The Bu'lul ie carved from a wooden statue of Northern Luzon. We see here the loss of meaning and value through one's culture or assimilation.
Texture: The Bu'lul are stylized representations of their ancestors and are thought to gain power and wealth.
Space: Bu'lul or also known as the tinagtaggu is a carved sculpture used to guard the crops of Ifugao People in Northern Luzon.