The Maya Ballgame
The Beginning and End of Time
de Photos by David Bjorkman • Text by Victoria Thomas
Voici le prix vu par vos clients. Éditer la liste des prix
À propos du livre
Each ancient Maya city had at least one ballcourt and one pyramid in its ceremonial center. The Maya played the Ballgame with unique balls made of rubber. As the ballplayers maneuvered the ball across the ballcourt, they struggled in an earthly ritual that mirrored the cosmological battle between day and night. With the ball being the Sun, the ballplayers the planets, and the stone ballcourt ring the portal to the Underworld, the game was a contest between death and rebirth.
The Ballgame ceased to be played in the 1500s, outlawed by the conquering Spaniards, who saw the bouncy rubber ball as an instrument of the devil. But now the Maya Ballcourts and pyramids are being rebuilt at a pace not seen in a thousand years. The Maya calendar, which twines the cycles of the Sun, moon and planets, is the most sophisticated ever devised by a civilization. According to the calendar, this current 5,126 year-long-cycle of Time that we live in began on August 13, 3114 BCE when the Hero Twins, Hunaphu and Xbanke, defeated the Lords of Death in an Underworld Ballgame. It will end on December 21, 2012. Now with this Maya cycle of Time rolling towards its end, the Ballgame is once again being resurrected.
Photographer David Bjorkman and writer Victoria Thomas have documented the only school in existence teaching young Maya boys the Maya Ballgame. Also included are photographs of 12 of Mexico's most impressive Maya pyramids, which symbolize the Upperworld. This book contains 37 of the 38 original photographs of the Maya Ballgame Museum Exhibit.
Caractéristiques et détails
- Catégorie principale: Voyages
-
Format choisi: Format paysage, 25×20 cm
# de pages: 52 - Date de publication: nov 07, 2008
- Langue English
- Mots-clés Victoria Thomas, David Bjorkman, Yucatan Peninsula, Maya Cosmology, Maya Underworld, Maya Pyramids, Maya Ballgame, Photography, Mexico, Maya, 2012
À propos du créateur
During his career, David Björkman has worked as a photojournalist, war photographer, art director, Minimalist Color Field painter, fine arts instructor, collage artist, book illustrator, and book publisher. As a photojournalist, he has been smuggled across borders at night and survived a chopper being shot out from under him. His photographs have been published in magazines in over 20 countries. To complete a book project,-he slept on the floor of a Lakota Sioux medicine man's house for weeks at a time. He met writer Victoria Thomas while on assignment to document the Explorer's Club Chagres River expedition, (Flag 172), into the Darien Gap of Panama, to undertake an archaeological survey of a Chocó settlement, and to collect Chocó artifacts for the Smithsonian Institution. This settlement belonged to Chocó Chief Antonio Zarco, who taught the original U.S. Apollo astronauts jungle survival in case their capsule landed in the tropics on reentry. Together they founded Zone913, Inc