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the making of
A S A C R E D G E O G R A P H Y
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Mary Heebner creating the pages for A Sacred Geography
at Dieu Donne in NYC.
Each box contains 12 of these pages and a full color print, “Drifts
and Plates”, related to the "Geomancy" series |
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One day on that trip to Mustang, we encountered a sinuous wall of
boulders etched with Tibetan prayers, mani. Its form rose from the
plain, foreshortening space like an oncoming train. The wall
was washed in sacred mineral colors of the three protector deities:
rust red for Vajrapani, clay gray for Manjushree, and chalk white
for Avalokiteshvara. I held these images of the Tibetan and Himalayan
landscape—its sacred geography—in mind, hoping some
day my experience would translate into art. Then in 2003, I
made individually pulp painted sheets of paper, using variations
of the three colors of the striped mani walls, to frame Sienna’s
sonnets. A book slowly began to take shape.
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As we rode our way through geologic time, traces of
an ancient seafloor poked up from the Kali Gandaki riverbed. Ordinary
black cobblestones split apart, revealed hidden secrets from the
once shallow Tethys Sea. These ammonite fossils –fetally curled
spirals of life adrift in Pangaea’s salty amniotic fluid –
pushed heavenward as the tectonic plates carrying the land mass
that is today called India pressed against the Eurasian continental
plates 30-50 million years ago, to create the highest mountains
on Earth. I picked up one of these fossils, known as a saligram
in Sanskrit and Nepali, and saved it in my pocket.
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My saligram- inspired drawings were converted into an engraved
image that was pressed into each decorated sheet of paper. The format
for the book would limn the loose-leafed books of Buddhist sutras
and classical texts of Mustang and Tibet.The fabric over board clamshell
boxes were handmade by John Balkwill at The
Lumino Press.
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The text for the artist's book and the reader's copy was printed
letterpress at The Lumino Press and constructed at Mary’s
studio. The chapbook is printed in an edition of 100 copies and
contains an Introduction and description of the places by Sienna
Craig and an afterword, “On Collaboration” by Mary Heebner. |

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