|
|
Oh,
What a Blow That Phantom Gave Me! by Edmund Carpenter
|
|
|
SEEING
IN THE ROUND
To depict a whole object on a flat surface, literate man employs three-dimensional
perspective: he shows only that surface visible from a single position
at a single moment. In short, he fails. In contrast, native artists of British Columbia represented a bear, say, in full face & profile, from back, above & below, from within & without, all simultaneously. By an extraordinary mixture of convention & realism, these butcher-draftsmen skinned & boned, even removed the entrails, to construct a new being, on a flat surface, that retained every significant element of the whole creature. |
|
Page
28
Oh, What a Blow That Phantom Gave Me! by Edmund Carpenter Holt, Rinehart and Winston - New York, Chicago, San Francisco Copyright 1972, 1973 by Edmund Carpenter translated to hypermedia and edited by Michael Wesch 2002 |