Petroglyphs found in a remote canyon near Abiquiu, NM. Jean Stimmell 4/21/12
|
Petroglyph found in a remote canyon near Abiquiu, NM. Jean Stimmell 4/21/12 |
But neither direction can be interpreted as negative or bad.
All photographs and images are by the author unless specifically identified otherwise. Note: clicking on them will make them bigger.
Petroglyphs found in a remote canyon near Abiquiu, NM. Jean Stimmell 4/21/12
|
Petroglyph found in a remote canyon near Abiquiu, NM. Jean Stimmell 4/21/12 |
A space to share my writing, images, and quotations around indigenous, philosophical, sustainable, and spiritual themes to facilitate dialogue and encourage creative exploration.
These "poetic essays" give primacy to artfulness over the conveying of information. They forsake narrative line, discursive logic, and the art of persuasion in favor of idiosyncratic meditation...
The lyric essay does not expound. It may merely mention…Generally it is short, concise and punchy like a prose poem. But it may meander, making use of other genres when they serve its purpose: recombinant, it samples the techniques of fiction, drama, journalism, song, and film [or image]…
The lyric essay often accretes by fragments, taking shape mosaically - its import visible only when one stands back and sees it whole. The stories it tells may be no more than metaphors. Or, storyless, it may spiral in on itself, circling the core of a single image or idea, without climax...
Perhaps we're drawn to the lyric now because it seems less possible (and rewarding) to approach the world through the front door, through the myth of objectivity. The life span of a fact is shrinking… We turn to the artist to reconcoct meaning from the bombardments of experience… For more, click on: Lyric Essay
I believe that reality, as we perceive it, is socially constructed: We create meaning in our lives through the stories we tell.
“While modernist thinkers tend to be concerned with facts and rules, postmodernists are concerned with meaning. In their search for and examination of meaning, postmodernists finds metaphors from the humanities more useful than the modernist metaphors or nineteenth-century physical science.” Quote from "Narrative Therapy" by Freedman and Combs (1996) p. 22.
8 comments:
I like to think these spirals are perhaps waves. The clockwise representative of the rising or forthcoming tide and the counterclockwise as the tide going outward or receding. Water on our planet is, after all, the greatest asset on Earth, and the absolute basic necessity for human beings to thrive. Why would this not be celebrated in ancient art as a rudamentary symbol used to decorate everything including clothing, rocks, caves, homes, vessels, animals, and everything else they loved to etch and represent it upon? After all, there is nothing more beautiful, useful,and powerful as the oceans, seas, and their tides, which had a direct correlation to the moon, stars and astronomy. I have been looking at this for a while now and do see some logic in it.
Not to argue,how would that explain spiral sites in say western Colorado, Wyoming, nowrthrn New Mexico ect. Places whose indigenous peoples probably never saw an ocean?
These are not spirals in the petroglyph photos. They are concentric circles like a target. Are there other photos depicting actual spirals?
Concentric circles, spirals, and swirls are not much different in that a 'swirl,' could perhaps be construed as a symbol of evolutionary life. This thought could then be extended and perhaps state that these 'circles' may encompass the very presence of life, hence, it's dependeny on the basic element, water. Without water being a central force in evolution, there would never have occured any such discussion between men about his discovery of said symbols. It can be contemplated then that life's emerging forms came about on Earth because there was the element H2O. We could also find there should definitely anbe found and depicted a viable concrete symbol which marries evolution, water, and the eternal existence of man and other complementary life forms.
What does coming down on spiral stairs from heaven mean?
I have to believe what the Native Americans say, It has been pass down from generations. I do not think there stories change that much.
Clockwise is a great symbol of respect for Native American culture also, pass things clockwise, walk a path around a shrine clockwise. Love and Light Steve Wild Eagle.
Good bless
Post a Comment