Across Japan, traditional religious rites preserve figures who appear with hidden faces, manifesting as beings that are no longer human. Concealing their name and face, these figures signify solely the roles they fulfil. Since ancient times, Japan has held the belief that divine spirits dwell in all things. This profound reverence for nature has been carried and expressed through matsuri — rituals carried out by the human body. In this series, the photographer explores what the matsuri represent; he notes that ‘once a ritual’s movements and customs are lost, it can never return in the same form.’ Today, many rituals face extinction due to a shrinking population, a lack of participants and the pressures of modern life. In a society with more reasons to stop than to continue, the mask now functions as a means of protecting that which is at risk of disappearing.