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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Forty-Eight: Telling stories with pictures > Navajo ponies, Monument Valley, Arizona, 2009
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12-NOV-2009

Navajo ponies, Monument Valley, Arizona, 2009

It is a simple image, yet one that tells a story that resonates with history. We encountered a group of ponies grazing at the base of one of Monument Valley’s famous buttes. Our presence obviously spooked them, because as soon as we arrived, they scattered. Two of them plodded past me, heading towards the prospect of food. I filled the foreground with grasses, representing such sustenance. A huge bush dominates the image, making the ponies seem small in comparison. A berm of compacted red sand fills the space behind them, removing all traces of sky and plain. The small horses belong to Navajos, possibly descended from horses originally brought to this place by Spanish conquistadors 400 years ago. The horse became a critical component of Navajo culture, originally providing transport for their nomadic lifestyle as well as giving the means to fight the Spanish and predatory Indian tribes. Today the Monument Valley Navajo use the ponies to offer tours and trail rides to tourists.

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Phil Douglis24-Nov-2009 02:19
There is a sense tranquility here, Carol -- they seem cut off from the world behind that berm -- nothing can bother them except for pesky photographers such as myself.
Carol E Sandgren24-Nov-2009 00:29
The ponies do look well-nourished. I like that you placed them, frame-wise, in the midst of the grassy sustenance. The berm of orangy sand looks very high as if they are corralled, By cropping off the top of the berm we would not know how high or low it is. The two look at peace.
Phil Douglis24-Nov-2009 00:08
You offer two words that express the mood here, Vera -- they indeed seem to be on their own here, and they stick together in their quest for nourishment. Thanks.
Guest 23-Nov-2009 23:35
Interesting since of solitude in companionship!
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