Raw Vision Magazine
  HOME
  LATEST ISSUE
  ONLINE SHOP
  SUBSCRIPTIONS
  RENEWALS
  GIFT SUBS
  BACK COPIES
  A-Z INDEX
  BOOKS
  SOURCEBOOK
  RAWVISION 123
  GALLERIES
  ARTISTS
  ORGANISATIONS
  ADVERTISING
  what is
RAW VISION?
  what is
OUTSIDER ART?
  AWARDS
  abcd ARTISTS
  ENVIRONMENTS
  NEK CHAND
  NEWS
  OBITUARIES
  BIBLIOGRAPHY
  ART FOR SALE
  LINKS
  sell
RAW VISION
  CONTACT
 
  Raw Vision    
 

PASAQUAN

Eddie Owens Martin (aka St. EOM) created one of the great visionary environments of the South. Dorothy Joiner reports.

Raw Vision #19

ORDER NOW

Excerpt:
...In rural southwest Georgia, Highway 137 heads out of tiny Buena Vista (Bewna Vista to natives), past neatly kept lawns, then through patches of kudzu and stands of scrub pine. After crossing Big Sandy Creek, the next winding road on the right leads to Pasaquan, the flamboyant compound conceived and built by Eddie Owens Martin between 1957 and his suicide in 1986.

Adopting the acronym St. EOM, like the Hindu Om, Martin created an architectural environment embellished by a farrago of religious and archetypal symbols. They reflected Africa, Easter Island, Pre-Columbian Mexico, and Guatemala, as well as the legendary continents Mu and Atlantis.


Given the name Pasaquan by spirit guides, Martin later learned that pasa is Spanish for 'pass,' and quoyan, in an Oriental language, means 'to bring the past and the future together'. Thereafter he interpreted his endeavor as transmitting the wisdom of the past into the future. At the same time that he claimed guidance by spirits from another realm, Martin also drew upon his knowledge of world religions gained from extensive reading and repeated exposure to art in New York City's museums. But perhaps the marijuana, rumoured to be cultivated in the countryside around his property, provided a primary catalyst to Martin's creativity.

 
 
Raw Vision #19 cover

For more text and images,
see Raw Vision
issue #19


Up