PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT
opens May 18
THE HUMAN ESSENCE
Ancient Images of Humans & Spirit Beings from the Dreamtime
Rock Art Paintings From Northern Australia
Photographic Exhibit by Peggy Grove, Ph.D.
Featuring Select Photographs from Seven Years of Anthropological
Research on
Ancient Aboriginal Rock Art in the Remote Escarpment Areas and Outback
of Australia
Peggy Grove, Ph.D. is responsible for major ground breaking theories
regarding the significance of the human figure in the vast ancient
rock art galleries of the Aboriginal people of Northern Australia.
Her deep analysis of current oral traditions gleaned through her
years of working directly with the Aboriginal elders and her invitations
to witness contemporary Aboriginal rituals allow her insight into
the intricately subtle, yet implicitly descriptive ancient narratives
of rock paintings. She has just completed her seventh year of research
in the remote outback and escarpment areas of Australia where monsoonal
rains, tropical heat, mosquitoes and snakes are common.
The photographs in the show span the spectacular arc of Aboriginal
paintings across the whole northern expanse of Australia. Exotic
images of humans and Ancestor Beings never before seen in historic
times, painted with rare minerals, hidden deep within escarpment
shelters and caves are featured.
The ancient rock paintings, done by the Aboriginal people in natural
ochres & clays for as long as 50,000 years, form the visual
aspect of the well known Songlines of the Aboriginal clans. They
are painted narratives indicative of their belief systems.
Dr. Grove and her colleagues are personally responsible for the
discovery of over 24 ancient rock art sites undiscovered and unknown
in our historical era. Dr. Grove has set forth new knowledge regarding
the stance of the human figures in these paintings (portrayals of
dance and initiation rituals or trance moments during dance), the
ritual regalia worn by the figures (puberty and age status portrayal),
and the intricate body markings painted on the figures (clan identification
as well as individual identification and place of spirit conception).
Her research speaks to a highly developed belief system of gender
reciprocity existing in the Aboriginal clan and to a highly developed
form of communication between the sexes through the use of string.

Filigree Handprint
Awunbarna Lagoon,
Western Arnhem Land, Australia
She is also an expert on the contemporary forms of bark painting
and painting on canvas. Her writing and lectures tie the ancient
rock paintings and the contemporary painting styles together, both
examples of a deeply embedded belief system. Her field work and
documentation set impeccable standards.
She has presented at national rock art conferences throughout the
world. She often works in collaboration with not only the clan elders,
but with other well known research scholars. Dr. Grove is an associate
professor in the Womens Spirituality Department at New College of
California in San Francisco where she specializes in Archaeomythology.
She was this years recipient of the Thanks Be To Grandmother Winifred
Foundation Grant designated especially for women over 55 who are
doing research benefiting women. She is a grandmother of four. Her
newest book about her experiences in Australia, Crossing the
Alligator, is in progress. |