Music, Arts
& Dance
ດົນຕີ, ສິລະປະ ແລະ ການຟ້ອນ
Lao artistic traditions are among the most distinctive in Southeast Asia — from the haunting sound of the khaen mouth organ to the graceful precision of classical Lao dance, from golden temple murals to the storytelling poetry of Mor Lam. Arts inseparable from Buddhism and community life.
Art that lives in
ceremony and community
ສິລະປະ ທີ່ດຳລົງຢູ່ ໃນ ພິທີ ແລະ ຊຸມຊົນ
In Lao culture, art is not a spectator activity — it is participation. Music is played at Buddhist ceremonies and funerals alike. Dance tells the stories of the Jātaka tales at temple festivals. Temple walls are painted with scenes from the Buddha’s life that serve as teaching texts for the illiterate and the learned equally. The artistic and the sacred are inseparable in Lao civilization.
The Khaen — the sound of Laos
ແຄນ — ສຽງ ຂອງ ລາວNo instrument is more central to Lao musical identity than the khaen (ແຄນ) — a free-reed mouth organ made of bamboo pipes of varying lengths bound together and played through a wooden windchest. UNESCO recognized the khaen as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2017. Its sound — a rich, resonant chord that can sustain melody and harmony simultaneously — is immediately recognizable as Lao.
The khaen is the indispensable accompaniment to Mor Lam (ໝໍລຳ) — the traditional Lao vocal performance tradition. A skilled khaen player can improvise accompaniment for hours, matching the emotional arc of the Mor Lam singer’s performance.
Mor Lam — the voice of the Mekong
ໝໍລຳ — ສຽງ ຂອງ ແມ່ນ້ຳຂອງMor Lam (ໝໍລຳ) is the traditional Lao and Isan vocal art form — a solo or duet performance in which a singer improvises verses in a distinctive rhythmic style, accompanied by the khaen. The texts range from religious and philosophical themes drawn from Buddhist teaching to humor, courtship, social commentary, and storytelling. A skilled Mor Lam singer (mo · ໝໍ = expert, lam · ລຳ = singing/dance) is a respected community figure — an improvising poet, oral historian, and entertainer in one.
Luk Thung (ລູກທຸ່ງ) — literally “child of the fields” — is the popular music tradition that grew from Mor Lam, incorporating modern instrumentation. Enormously popular across Laos and Isan Thailand, Luk Thung addresses everyday Lao life, love, longing for home, and the rural experience with emotional directness and melodic beauty.
Classical Lao dance — the language of the gods
ການຟ້ອນລາວ ຄລາດສິກClassical Lao dance (ການຟ້ອນລາວ) is one of the most refined art forms in Southeast Asia — a tradition of extraordinarily graceful movement in which the dancer’s hands, fingers, and arms form mudras (sacred gestures) borrowed from Indian Buddhist iconography. Performers wear elaborate golden costumes inspired by the clothing of celestial beings (Apsara · ອັບສອນ) depicted in temple murals. Training begins in childhood and takes many years to master the precise positions and their meanings.
Classical dance performances were historically associated with the royal court and temple festivals. Today they are performed at Pi Mai, national celebrations, and cultural events — a living connection to the Lane Xang kingdom’s artistic heritage. The National Lao Ballet (ລະຄອນລາວ) in Vientiane preserves and performs this tradition.
Temple art — paintings that teach the Dhamma
ສິລະປະ ໃນວັດ — ຮູບ ທີ່ ສອນ ພຣະທຳThe interior walls of Lao Buddhist temples are covered with magnificent murals — paintings in vivid reds, golds, and blues depicting scenes from the Buddha’s life, the Jātaka tales, the Buddhist cosmos (with its heavens and hells), and local Lao legends. These are not merely decorative — they are the illustrated Dhamma library of communities where literacy was historically limited. For centuries, ordinary Lao people learned the teachings of the Buddha by looking at the walls of their temple.
The mural tradition reached its height during the 17th and 18th centuries. The finest surviving examples are in the temples of Luang Prabang — particularly Wat Xieng Thong, whose glass mosaic panels and interior murals are considered masterworks of Lao art.
Lao cultural organizations across America actively preserve these art forms. Khaen players perform at Pi Mai festivals. Classical dance troupes teach children the traditional forms. Mor Lam events draw large Lao community audiences. And a new generation of Lao-American musicians and artists is creating work that bridges both worlds — honoring the khaen while rapping in English, painting temple murals in Los Angeles, weaving traditional sinh (ສິ້ນ) patterns into contemporary fashion. The tradition is alive because the people who carry it refuse to let it die.
