Oshun - dance
Ochún (also Oshún) is the Orisha of sweet water, love, beauty, and femininity. Her dance is the most sensual and joyful in the Orisha repertoire — flirtatious, flowing, and irresistibly charming.
Dance Character
Where Yemayá is the vast, maternal ocean, Ochún is the sweet, playful river:
- Light and joyful — Ochún smiles; her dance is full of pleasure and delight
- Flirtatious and coquettish — she plays with her hair, looks over her shoulder, invites admiration
- Sensual hip movement — flowing, rolling hips that move like water over smooth stones
- Golden energy — her movements have a warmth and luminosity to them; even her pauses are inviting
Key Movements
- Hair play — running hands through the hair (or a wig); smoothing, lifting, arranging; Ochún is vain in the best sense
- Mirror gesture — looking into an imaginary mirror, admiring herself, adjusting her appearance
- Honey gesture — dipping a finger into honey and tasting it — Ochún loves sweet things
- Fan work — if carrying a fan (abanico), it opens, closes, and flutters as part of the dance
- Flowing hip rolls — figure-eight hip motions, smooth and continuous
- River arm movements — arms flowing forward like water moving downstream
Props
Ochún dancers often carry:
- A fan — gold or yellow, used throughout the dance
- A mirror — for the self-admiration gesture
- Honey pot — sometimes carried or referenced
Color and Dress
Ochún's color is gold and yellow. Her dress is typically yellow or gold, often with layers that move beautifully during turns and hip movements.
Toques: Oshún rhythms including Chachalokefún in some lineages; Iyesá tradition also closely associated with Ochún
Iyesá is a batá rhythm rooted in the Iyesá nation — one of the African ethnic groups brought to Cuba during the slave trade, from the Ijesa Yoruba people of southwestern Nigeria. It is primarily associated with Ochún and sometimes Yemayá.
Lees meer >Yemayá is the Orisha of the sea and the mother of all Orishas. She governs the saltwater ocean and all living things within it. As mother, she is nurturing, protective — and when angered, devastating.
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