Male and female bulul statues are often found together, with sex-related symbols such as the mortar for the female and pestle for the male. Male bulul may sometimes be depicted with
loincloth, and females with
tapis (
wrap skirts), earrings and anklets. The bulul has a simplified form, and is traditionally carved from
narra or
ipil wood. The bulul is touched by hands dipped in the blood of a chicken or pig in a ritual called
tunod during the rice planting season. Bulul are nowadays mostly manufactured for the tourist trade, but a local family may buy such a bulul and use it for ceremonial purposes, thus in a sense adding
authenticity. Some of the carvers, such as
Rey Paz Contreras, have become well-known artists, with their work exhibited and sold widely in the Western world. Contreras uses discarded wood from the railways for his carvings of bulul and other
anito (guardian deity) figures. ==See also==