The art of the shaman : rock art of California

Bibliographic Information

The art of the shaman : rock art of California

David S. Whitley

University of Utah Press, c2000

Other Title

L'art des chamanes de Californie : le monde des Amérindiens

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Note

Originally published as French translation: Paris : Seuil, 2000

Includes bibliographical references

Contents of Works

  • The discovery of Rodriguez Cabrillo
  • The native Californian world
  • Types and ages of native California rock art
  • Rock art traditions
  • Ethnography and Californian rock art
  • Altered states of consciousness and metaphors of the supernatural

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Native Californian rock art includes some of the finest examples of traditional art in the world. Ranging from complex polychrome cave paintings and deeply incised designs on basalt canyon walls to large earthen figures along the terraces of the Colorado River, this art invites wonder and curiosity.The Art of the Shaman is more than a gallery of lavish illustrations. Beginning with a basic description of the nature, age, and variability of California rock art, David Whitley accomplishes the ambitious feat of interpreting the symbolism itself. His well-grounded exposition sets this book apart from other rock art books. Whitley demonstrates that California rock art was not created simply for artistic expression but was deliberately intended to represent symbolic systems communicating relatively few specific messages. These included vision questing, initiation, fertility, sexuality, the mythic past, life crises, and altered states of consciousness, all centered on shamanistic experience in this world and beyond. Inasmuch as shamanism was the basis for all Native Californian religions, Whitley taps the rich ethnographic information available on the subject to provide the underlying logic for much of the art in the various California traditions. The Art of the Shaman is a masterwork on rock art that should be in the library of anyone who has ever looked at an ancient pictograph with awe.

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