PeggyDobbins.net

Home

"...dwelling in tents"

Prologue to "..in tents"

1 Humanization proceeds

2 Mothers make babies

3 Specialization Interdep

4 Agriculture Marriage

5 origin surplus labor ti

6 class state other thing

7 Patriarchal Revolution

8 What IS to be done?

epilogue

artist statement

contact

Intern'l Behind Barcode

What if?

LaSalle lands in Texas

draft script

intro Sor's ltr Paris sc

Berlandier

KARANKAWAN VOCABULARY

Sor Juana's letter

E. O. F. H. S. T.

fortune bequest to CCISD

Na ka Kaana-koko

Aal Ga's est-day

Naxi Traditional Culture

1 Guo, Gao, Hu

2 Guo Intro 1st U.S. show

2.1 Naxi trad cult sex ed

2.2 2.6 Texas show 2005

2.3publicationGao's Naxi

3 images + pre Atlanta sh

4 Atlanta show 2006

5 Albuquerque show

6 Albuquerque 2

7 Albuquerque 3

8 Summary: Naxi Nexus

9 8 hypotheses

Written in Sand

1 more about the artists

dale's snake

collaboration

 
New Mexico poet and artist, Dale Harris, took the lead in bringing Gao's work and mine, inspired by his,  to Albuquerque.  While I had used a computer graphic program (Illustrator) and the oldest Egyptian pictographs I could find on line ( F. Raffaele, G. Dreyer)       to add my interpretation to
5 familiar tales from Western mythology (Egyptian, Sumerian, Hebrew, Greek, and Roman) add,  Harris used handmade paper, grasses, and branches gathered in the countryside between her home and the Petroglyph National Monument outside Albuquerque to add her interpretation of her home land to those who had lived there before her.  The show opened June 6th, 2008 and received front page coverage in arts section of the leading newspaper Albuquerque Journal.    On June 20th, Harris led a lively discussion of questions raised by the juxtaposition of a Han calligraphy artist's interpretation of the Naxi genesis myth using Dongba pictographs, and our use of pictographs from other cultures.  Had Gao inspired us to take liberties we would not have otherwise?   What  is the relation between an artist of one culture and the truths of the culture of another people?  How does the response of an artist from a different time and place differ from that of a scientist, an anthropologist, an ethnographer? 

 

snake from petroglyph, South West U.S.
snake from petroglyph
Dale Harris, Albuquerque artist, petroglyphs, snake
artist's response
Lou Liberty, a poet and retired professor of medieval studies, cited the view that a language consists of a set of agreements on what symbols and/or sounds represent.   She noted that she found herself surrounded by magical mysteries when she entered.
Indeed, the Dongba, chroniclers and scholars of the Naxi, were denoted with the word "shamen" by non-Naxi Chinese introducing  them to me and other international guests in 2001.    This is the same word  English speaking South Americans used when I was first introduced to an indigenous curer, whose efficacy was mysterious magic, when I was a student and bio-ethnography a new subject.   Aside from other factors making me see them as exotic, mysterious, misunderstandable,  most Americans have learned what we have from indigenous shamen, shamefully.  I asked a question in English.  Someone translated in Spanish what he thought I wanted to know to someone who spoke Quechua.  The Otavalo grandmother responds in Quechua.  Her daughter tells us in Spanish what she understands her grandmother told me.  And the Ecuadorian who took me to meet his relatives in Otavalo gives me the answer he thinks proper.  The same when I interviewed the Na, or Muso, grandmother in Lake Lugo. 

 But, as Liberty explained, when she took the risk and ventured "literally inside the tent"  the mysterious writing on the  outside was revealed mirror image as
simple English. 

Debbi Brody, owner of the Canyon Road Contemporary Gallery in Santa Fe, got to the bottom by asking, "How come the tent?"  Caught off guard, I had to answer:   Arabic is written right to left.  English left to right.  For the words to agree, one had to be written backward.   Printed on transparent enough fabric,  you can read the backward English if you can get on the other side, and I couldn't  stretch it down the middle of the gallery without getting in the way of the other artists the first time I showed it." 

Chinese influence on American, Gao Feng, Naxi, Dongba, Albuquerque art talk
Discussion of Gao Feng, Dongba, and Naxi influence on American artists
Dale Harris, Albuquerque artist, petroglyphs, Peggy Dobbins, "dwelling in tents"  Gao Feng  Naxi Dongba
Dale Harris' PETROGLYPHS in window, Peggy Dobbins' "..DWELLING IN TENTS" on floor; Gao Feng's WORSHIP HEAVEN on 3 walls.
Arabic, Arabic English translation, Leonardo, mirror writing, backward writing
when translating Arabic, write English backward
Charles Usmar, one of the principals responsible for Albuquerque's petroglyphs being declared a National Monument seemed to appreciate Harris's presentation of the most primitive petroglyph symbols  -- created not by carving into the rock nor drawing upon it, but by scraping  red and limestone rocks, blackened by lichen, ancient, primitive, life, to make "the rocks begin to speak"  (title of a book self published in 1973 by a local amateur, LaVan Martineau,  before the petroglyphs of the SouthWest U.S. hit the world of fashion or academia.  

 home                                                                                                          next  --> p. 7 Albuquerque 3

October 20, 2011 updated for Occupy Atlanta.   free use; please credit and link to www.peggydobbins.net

Website powered by Network Solutions®