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By Cynthia Morin
A rockpile ceases to be a rockpile the moment a
single man contemplates it, bearing within him the image of a
cathedral.
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Rock sculptures, also known as Stone Cairns,
can be found among many cultures and throughout many countries
including Scotland, Ireland, Tibet, and in the Arctic. In many
cultures, cairns may mark the site of a burial, the summit of a
mountain, or a special event.
Above and Left: Photos of
stone cairns at Acadia National Park,
Mount Desert Island, ME
© Daliel Leite 2007
From early civilization to the present, cairns
have been created for both practical and meaningful reasons. Often
created simply as directional markers pointing the way home or to
safety, the cairns are also a symbol of the spirit of friendship and
hope. The rock sculptures were built by those who had been down a
path, to mark the way for others to follow.
Today, the creation of rock cairns and stone balancing is pursued by
many as an art form and as a meditation practice.
The more modern ‘rock balancing’ calls upon the ancient art of
constructing cairns which involves the balancing of large rocks on
small ones, without the use of mortar. As in earlier times, these
modern sculptures may appear as loose, small piles of stones or very
elaborate feats of engineering.
Why do we continue these traditions? Perhaps rocks represent to us
messages of endurance and strength.
Cairns can, of course, make interesting and
decorative focal points within a garden or along a wooded pathway.
Stacked or balanced, cairns offer moments for reflection and inner
balance in our hectic lifestyles.
Of all the many websites on the internet that feature stone cairns
and rock balancing, my favorite is the one developed by Daliel Leite
in honor of Bill Dan, the famous San Francisco rock artist. The
following is excerpted, with Daliel’s permission, from the “Rock and
Stone Balancing World Wide Community” page at Rock On, Rock ON!
www.rock-on-rock-on.com
“Human beings have been picking
up rocks for a very long time. Some have used them to build
absolutely stable pyramids designed to conquer time. Others would be
tempted to balance a rock on the top of that pyramid, knowing that
chance, a brisk wind, a slight earth tremor, or even an experimental
poke by an incredulous observer will topple it over.
“Far to the north, the Inuit of the Arctic traditionally build
enormous stone figures of carefully placed boulders along waterways,
announcing both their presence and their resourceful strength. Food
may be found here, even shelter, the stones seem to say -- as long
as they stand, so shall we.
“Cairns and other rock piles have globally been used to mark a path,
a place, or an event, with later visitors adding (or removing)
stones as time passes. They are meant to last, as long as they carry
useful meaning.
“Yet even the arid "balancing rocks" of the vast Southwestern
deserts, perched in unlikely configurations, are merely frozen in
their travel towards sand and sea. We know they could fall, should
fall, will fall, in the fullness of
time.
“Balancing is play and it is work. It is dance and, for some, it is
prayer. Human beings stand upright against gravity; balancing on
slender legs; toppling over in the controlled for-
ward fall called walking.
“And then, of course, there is beauty in this craft. Each rock in a
balanced sculpture becomes perfect in its placement, its center of
mass and gravity either directly above that of the one below it, or
intricately interacting with others to share a mutual center, much
as the Earth and moon orbit around a point somewhere
between them.”
"To see the world in a grain of sand" -- balancing
all of life on the tip of a stone.
© Daliel Leite 2007 Visit
website for more of Daliel's photos and writings on cairns
Note: To View other stone cairns in Eureka area by
photographer Thomas Morin or submit your own sacred expressions
click here
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