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david
eubank METEOR STUDIO HOME |
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2008 About the Exhibit Today’s headlines
detail the failure of our way of life, a human system on the brink of
Collapse. This is not a new story in the history of civilization. It is a
story of transition from the past to the present and an uncertain future.
Several years ago, I read Jarred Diamond’s book Collapse. He writes
about the people of Today the reasons why these civilizations failed is part speculation and part science, the mystery of what, when and where they went remains un-spoken in stories of a vanished civilization. After reading Diamond’s
account of the failure of the Chaco Culture, I wanted to go to As I embarked on my expedition of discovery, I went as an Artist not as a Scientist. My discoveries are intuitive, based on my feeling about this place. My intuition, my gut feeling about what happened and what remains were my source, my sense of this place. Diamond writes about an
enterprising culture that had a purpose to develop beyond their limits and
technology to sustain them. They were a culture that destroyed their
sustainable environment for the sake of development of expansion. It is
un-clear in the forgotten stories why this development was so important to
the Chacoan’s. Some archeologists
believe the pueblos were only used during ceremonial seasons and that only a
small population of people inhabited the area year round. As the story goes,
thousands of visitors would come to Diamond writes about
how the people deforested the landscape. They cut down all of the trees of
what once was a forest far beyond what the eye can see into the distance from
the canyon so they could build their city. What remains is a desolate
landscape void of any large trees. Ponderosa Pine covered the landscape
before. Diamond estimates that the As I drove toward As I walked through the ruins, I imagined the stories told and the laughter in the Kivas, circular rooms where people gathered to enjoy the company of others. Room after room the presence of the people remains. The great canyon wall that shelters the city is a place for stories bearing evidence of art and culture. Rock Art, perhaps the billboards or the signs of the culture tell the story-- water, rain, of corn, and of new comers. I think many of these drawings are maps, signs for the next generation that tells where the water flowed and where you plant corn. Stains in the rock face of the canyon show the eons of sediment from the flow of water now gone. Images of plenty, of corn and raindrops on water and an awareness of time speak to me from the images of ancient artists. Artists who were aware that they had the ability to speak beyond their own time, to communicate into a future they would not know themselves. The question I asked
myself was, “Did their simple depictions of life in This is the very premise that Jarred Diamond writes about in his book. It is the awareness that systems fail, that things fall apart. It is the idea that if a culture can recognize these changes-- the limits of their environment soon enough, that they can change their behavior to ensure their sustainability. It was not war here in
the This series of Photographs will perhaps tell the story of my intuitive feeling about the stories and names we can speak No More.
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