Bundles

Ben Black Elk

I’m back to my boyhood again and my friendship with Ben Black Elk. Ben was a mentor to a number of us boys in Keystone, a small mining town in the Black Hills of South Dakota. Ben was the only Indian who posed for tourist’s photos at Mount Rushmore, which was just four miles up the hill.

Keystone was a gold rush town from the late 1870s and was sacred land to the Sioux.
I think we know how that piece of history was handled. I’m trying to remember the many things that Ben told me about the Sioux culture and the meanings, and spiritual purposes, of medicine bundles. The Sioux, and other tribes, considered these wrapped packages of symbols to be holy, and each keeper kept the contents of their bundle safe and secret.

Bundle #1

A bundle might include seeds, grass, animal teeth, claws, horsehair, rocks, crystals, tobacco, beads, arrowheads, bones, and anything symbolizing spiritual meaning,
good fortune, and hope, contained in a small wrapped package. Individuals, shamans, medicine men, and sometimes the whole community were involved in the accumulation of these symbols. Information about medicine bundles in the culture is available on the search engines.

Bundle #2

My paper sculpture bundles are based on the medicine bundle concept of a collection
of objects for my spiritual and nostalgic reasons. My bundles don’t hide the objects contained in them, all of my chosen elements burst out in an exuberant display of those objects and symbols that were an everyday part of my childhood.

Bundle #3

Old leather, feathers, horns, antlers, pine needles, grass, weaving, rust, arrowheads, antiques, and relics of the past, all with a feeling of texture, smell of age, use, and a
melting away of the past.

Bundle #4

When I build a bundle, it’s a spiritual event for me because I relive those days, and, like a missionary, I attempt to communicate the experience of my joy during those brief days of my youth. My palette is always comprised of warm colors with accents of cool hues that enhance the warmth. Rich, deep, heavily neutralized and textured color to involve the viewer in my recollections of a former time.

Ben's Shirt

Occasionally, I was in Ben’s small house, which was just across the creek from ours.
My limited memory of those times, nearly seventy years ago, is of the leather shirts, beaded, painted and fringed, a full headdress, feathers, beadwork, and other regalia
that were hanging on a wall.

I pushed on them, held them, smelled them, and heard rough rustling sounds, as I rubbed them on my face. I absorbed and experienced them with every sense and sensibility.
They are still with me, as strong as ever, at eighty.

Bundle #5

The following is verse 12 from, “Tao Te Ching”, A New Version For All Seekers”.
a translation by Guy Leekley, brilliant teacher and good friend.

Seeing the shadow
Around each color,
We honor our inner eye.

Hearing the silence
Around each sound,
We honor the inner ear.

Feeling the sacred
Around each moment,
We honor the inner heart.

Freed from grasping
In the material world,
True Seekers follow
Their inner light.

Freed from the bonds of delusion,
Their spirits soar.

Bundle #6

Thanks for visiting me…

leo

Inquiries about the availability of my work can be made by emailing me at leothecolorman [at] gmail.com. Ben Black Elk and Bundle #5 are available as giclee prints.

The Cicadas Are Coming, the Cicadas Are Coming!

We are about to be beset by bugs. A lot of things bug me but these bugs are brutal beasts, screaming day and night after rising from the earth like made up extras in a day of the dead Hollywood film.

Cicadas

Every 17 years, give or take a few, swarms of extraordinarily ugly bugs search for mates, make babies and die. For about six weeks the males make a clicking sound and when billions of them click together, there is a clicking, hissing, screeching, screaming noise that travels in overwhelming waves throughout many of North Carolina’s forests, blocking out all other sounds. No outdoor concerts, or barbecues, or pool parties. Did you ever try to scoop a billion bugs out of a pool?

The birds do their level best but they can’t eat them all, so dead cicadas are all over the place. On our houses, cars, driveways, streets, and our heads. A monster-mess of ugly bugs on steroids.

Basic Beetle

Bugs are in everyday language. Bug out, bug off, you bug me, we’ve been bugged, they’ve got bugs, you’ve got bugs, (what’s worse I’ve got bugs), sbuggetti, bugaroni, may the bug be with you.

Beetles! Now there’s a colorful bunch o’ bugs for you. Like little, hard shell painter’s palettes with six legs and an appetite for nature’s unwary little creatures. If you sit on them, they become butt biting bugs.

Stag Beetle

As long as I’m talking about bugs, let me tell you what is really bugging me. I am bugged by bozos with the authority to damage education in the lower grades from kindergarten to the eighth grade. Eliminate art and music from the mix, they say; they’re just a waste of time that could be spent larnin their sums. But be sure to keep the sports programs. Sure, sports are as important as art and music, but not more important.

Everyone should be athletic for life, but a very small percent of the population become professional athletes. However, comma, there are millions of designers in every occupation. Graphic designers, industrial designers, fashion designers, auto designers, interior designers, electronic designers, toy designers, game designers…I don’t have room to list them all, there are hundreds. The point is, little leagues in every sport are necessary, and eliminating art and music is killing the little league of art, design and music.

Lady Bugs changing spot colors

By the time students enter high school, it is too late for the basics of the arts. They are interested in other things, including the other sex, and have no experience of the arts to help them decide whether to enter the profession. I can’t name one thing that is designed, manufactured, marketed, advertised and sold to those bozos, who are not aware that every thing they see, wear, drive, live in, and enjoy, has been given its form by the hand of a professional artist.

If all of the designers in every occupation would join together, they would be the biggest political pressure group in the country, hell, in the whole damn world. We probably couldn’t run the country but we could sure design it.

Thanks for visiting me…

leo

The Weaverville Art Safari open studios tour is upon us again, April 27 & 28th.
For information, visit the web site.

Stag Beetle 18×30″ unframed $1200
Basic Beetle 15×24″ unframed $900