WILLIAM DAWSONWILLIAM
DAWSON: ARTIST AS SHAPE-SHIFTER Michael Bonesteel introduces
the quirky work of William
Dawson, whose carvings and paintings display
a strong individuality.
Excerpt:
Long ago, the trees thought they were people.
Long ago, the mountains thought they were people.
Long ago, the animals thought they were people.
Someday they will say, long ago the humans thought they
were people.
Native American storyteller, Johnny Moses
The idea of animal/human metamorphosis has existed
since the beginning of time. There is even a name for
it: therianthropy. Depictions of such creatures, therianthropes,
range worldwide and in all cultures. Cave paintings
from the upper Paleolithic period depict winged men
and women with long bird beaks. A drawing of a dancing
man in the cave of Les Trois Freres has antlers growing
from his eyebrows. The humanoid Celtic lord of stags,
Cernunnos, carved in rock during the 4th century in
northern Italy, was known as the 'Horned God'.
There are stories about dogs and dragons in ancient
China who could take human form. The Turkic people of
China believed they were descended from wolves. The
Egyptian sky god, Horus, had the head of a falcon. The
Greek god Zeus often assumed animal shapes in his pursuit
of young women. The Norse god Odin could transform at
will into bird or beast. Scottish Selkies walked as
men on land, but swam transformed as seals in the sea.
Long before similar creatures appeared in fairy tales
such as 'The Frog Prince' or 'Beauty and the Beast,'
there were werewolves and cat wives in Europe; were-tigers
in India; frog husbands in Tibet; leopard men, hyena
men and lion wives in Africa; elk men, deer maidens,
bear husbands, fox wives and mountain lion wives in
Native America.
The animal/human hybrid, having emerged spontaneously
in so many cultures, is without question a universal
archetype of the unconscious mind. Its meaning and purpose
is enigmatic and ineffable, but its presence is undeniable.
That is why it is all the more fascinating to find
it erupt without warning in the work of Chicago African
American visionary artist, William Dawson (1901-1990).
The work of William Dawson became internationally renowned
as part of the 1982 travelling exhibition 'Black Folk
Art in America,' first mounted at the Corcoran Gallery
in Washington, DC. Dawson himself became famous for
taking First Lady Nancy Reagan's arm at the show's opening
reception and personally leading her through the exhibition
as newspaper and TV cameras shot them, and reporters
yelled out questions. He had certainly transformed himself
dramatically over the course of his life: from rural
farm kid with barely a grade-school education to successful
urban produce manager; and then from aging blue-collar
retiree to world-class self-taught artist. But neither
of these transformations reflected his most magical
and adept feats of metamorphosis.
Dawson grew up with his brother on his grandfather's
horse farm in Huntsville, AL, where his favourite animals
were the horses he rode bareback and the dogs that ran
barking alongside them. When he was still a young boy,
his father made him a little horse cart, but it was
not a horse that pulled the laughing youngster through
the dusty tobacco fields. It was his father. The fact
that Dawson's father assumed the role of a horse would
not seem significant ordinarily, but this innocent,
mundane activity between Dawson and his father suggests
a deeper situation, for the interchange of man and animal
is a motif reflected again and again in Dawson's life
and work. He remained blithely unaware of any such intention
on his part, yet he left open the imaginative possibility
that anything might be 'revealed.'