Sledgehammers and Spray-Paint Now Dominate the Art Scene at Cow Springs, Arizona
In September 2013, I wrote about the state of the art at Cow Springs,
  Arizona. The term “Cow Springs” has a triple meaning. It stands first 
for the  elusive springs once used to water cattle. Second, it stands 
for the small Navajo community  that occupies a space between  Cow Springs Lake and U.S. Highway 160, thirty miles south of Kayenta,
 Arizona.  Third, the name is synonymous with the long defunct Cow 
Springs Trading Post and  service station, which once stood across the 
highway from the settlement.
Being too small to rate its own U.S. Census district, no one knows how 
many  Navajo actually live in Cow Springs. There are no discernible 
commercial  services available in the settlement. With that, the “Cow  Springs Head Start”
 nursery school appears to be the most prominent  enterprise in town. To
 see for myself, in October 2013 I took a quick driving  tour of Cow 
Springs. After looking around, I would guess the place has a few  
hundred residents.
After inspecting the ruin of the former  Cow Springs Trading Post, I then drove across the highway, over a  railroad grade crossing
 and into a tiny hamlet of mostly well-kept frame  houses. Turning south
 on what appeared to be the major road in town, my path  paralleled the 
highway. With my travel trailer in tow, I could not locate Cow  Springs 
Lake, which I knew lay to my southwest. Although I could see the growth 
 of a tree line upstream of the dwindling lake, I could not risk 
becoming stuck on  some dead end road.
Despite the fact that the Cow Springs Trading Post  closed over forty-five years ago, human activity in and around the  ghost-building remains high. The two  artistic implements of choice remain  spray-paint and the sledgehammer. Almost
 equal in their usage, paint covers old  art as the hammers continue 
deconstructing what little remains of the building.  Since my previous 
visit, in the spring of 2013, the rate of destruction was  astonishing. 
Even the paint on the old Standard Oil Products pole-sign appeared  more
 flaked and baked in the sun.
artistic implements of choice remain  spray-paint and the sledgehammer. Almost
 equal in their usage, paint covers old  art as the hammers continue 
deconstructing what little remains of the building.  Since my previous 
visit, in the spring of 2013, the rate of destruction was  astonishing. 
Even the paint on the old Standard Oil Products pole-sign appeared  more
 flaked and baked in the sun.
When observing public art, most humans tend to like older, more traditional works.
  Although portraits of warriors and braves once adorned the concrete 
block walls  of the ruin, most are now gone or covered with many layers 
of seemingly random  words and images. If we can surmise any underlying 
theme within recent art at  Cow Springs, it is that those in power will 
fall some day.  Apocalyptic art and poetry, accented by the hammers of destruction create accidental cubist works.
 Perhaps
 the best example of "sledgehammer cubism" is the Prophet, seen here in a
  time-lapse animated GIF image. Not many years ago,  the Prophet appeared
 on a prominent wall of the ruin. Evocatively painted  with both 
brushstrokes and spray-paint stencils, destructionist wrecking crews 
soon  targeted the work. On my 2009 visit to the ruin, the concrete slab
 that held the  Prophet’s image no longer stood. Although the image of 
the Prophet remained  largely intact, it was now lying on the concrete 
floor. During my most recent  visit, I noted that the visage of the 
Prophet had become a jumble of  unrecognizable fragments. After an 
extensive sledgehammer attack, portions of  one haunting eye and a bit 
of a skullcap were all that I could recognize.  although rotated or 
tumbled into a chaotic pattern, most of the fragments remained in their 
places.
Perhaps
 the best example of "sledgehammer cubism" is the Prophet, seen here in a
  time-lapse animated GIF image. Not many years ago,  the Prophet appeared
 on a prominent wall of the ruin. Evocatively painted  with both 
brushstrokes and spray-paint stencils, destructionist wrecking crews 
soon  targeted the work. On my 2009 visit to the ruin, the concrete slab
 that held the  Prophet’s image no longer stood. Although the image of 
the Prophet remained  largely intact, it was now lying on the concrete 
floor. During my most recent  visit, I noted that the visage of the 
Prophet had become a jumble of  unrecognizable fragments. After an 
extensive sledgehammer attack, portions of  one haunting eye and a bit 
of a skullcap were all that I could recognize.  although rotated or 
tumbled into a chaotic pattern, most of the fragments remained in their 
places.
The dramatic spray-paint profile titled “Navajo Warrior”
 had suffered a similar  fate. Over the course of a decade or so, the 
female warrior mythos had  suffered various graffiti-induced 
indignities. On this visit, I found  her  image obliterated by elaborate graffiti monikers. In the afternoon sun, only her  red-accented left eye shone through to me.
As recently as 2012, local artist  Jetsonorama’s
 photo-mural depicting a young Navajo girl graced a prominent  
south-facing wall of the ruin. Resplendent in her finery, but with one 
eye torn  mostly away, her youthful energy and optimism still shone 
through. A year later,  beneath a welter of angry words and misogynistic
 art, her visage now hides from  the world.
As I indicated at the beginning of this story, most people opine for the day when  art was beautiful and  easy to appreciate. A century ago, the  likes of Pablo Picasso
  deconstructed beautiful images into their cubic components. Likewise, 
unseen hands  continue to  deconstruct the remaining walls and art at 
the Cow Springs Trading Post. Those works not yet obliterated, are 
festooned with colorful fragments  of the deconstructionists' aching 
souls.
  
By James McGillis at 06:50 PM | Fine Art | Comments (1) | Link

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