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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Forty-Seven: How using words in pictures can expand meaning > Pet Cemetery, The Presidio, San Francisco, California, 2007
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11-JUN-2007

Pet Cemetery, The Presidio, San Francisco, California, 2007

Formerly a place where military pets were buried, this small, secluded cemetery became part of the park system when the Presidio army base closed in 1995. The graves and wooden markers are in varying states of disrepair. The markers lean in various directions, as if they can’t make up their minds whether to stand or fall. Dogs, cats, birds, rabbits, hamsters, lizards, goldfish and mice are buried here -- below an on-ramp to the Golden Gate Bridge. The words on the grave markers are incongruous, since they are often informal, and sometimes even amusing. (“Loved Pet Stinky – Not Really – Bye Now”) They speak of animals, not man. Yet in some of these words of mourning, the sense of loss is indelible and often haunting. A splash of sunlight divides the dark shadows here in half – offering a glimmer of hope to an otherwise grim scene.

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Phil Douglis20-Jul-2007 20:41
That's what makes this image so moving, Iris. We express sentiments of grief and loss here in human terms --incongruously meant for creatures that would never be able to understand them. As always, cemeteries are places created by the needs and desires of the living, not the dead. It was indeed a moving experience to visit this place.
Iris Maybloom (irislm)20-Jul-2007 18:05
For those of us who are animal lovers, the pet cemetery is a very poignant expression of loyalty and love. Even for those of us who are uncomfortable visiting cemeteries, this one was a very profound and moving experience.
Phil Douglis01-Jul-2007 19:58
Yes, Marisa, death is the great equalizer. Eventually, simple markers and lavish tombs alike will crumble, and the dead beneath them and within them will eventually be forgotten. Even the most famous tombs of them all, the four thousand year old Great Pyramids, weave their spell not because of the particular kings who built them, but because of their age, mystical associations and unanswered questions. (Seehttp://www.pbase.com/image/22393854) They were meant to proclaim the might of royal power for all time, but who remembers what kings such as Cheops or Khufu accomplished or even who he was? The builder of the Great Pyramid is just as dead as the cats, servants and slaves who may have been entombed with him. The Pharonic mummy from the Great Pyramid was never discovered. Was it stolen? Or was it entombed somewhere else? The fascinating questions that haunt us 4,000 years after the fact will not bring anyone back to life, or even tell us who they were or what they accomplished. In the end, as you say, Marisa, there is nothing more democratic than death.
Guest 01-Jul-2007 13:13
You said something interesting, Phil. There seems to be a difference between this little pets cemetery with a kind of "hand made" markers and Recoleta, a huge area covered by fancy monuments, full of expensive art objects and surrounded by famous and important people of the history of my country. Still, the end is the same to all of us, pets and 'owners', richs and poors. In that point, there's nothing more democratic than death. We all finish in the same way and rest in the same place, no matter what we try to believe through our lives.
Phil Douglis29-Jun-2007 19:24
I am delighted that you made the first comment on this image, Marisa -- and I am glad you brought up Recoleta. I felt a sense of abandonment there as well, and that is to be expected. Grief and remembrance fade as time and nature intervene. That great city of the dead in Buenos Aires overflows with marble tombs and statuary. This little cemetery is largely made of wooden markers and covers only a tiny area. Yet the dead in both places are, as you put it, essentially put out of sight and out of mind, as the mourners themselves pass away. You are right -- the inevitable decay of monuments and markers both great and small underscores the "naieve illusion of eternity."
Guest 29-Jun-2007 00:21
This image reminds me of Recoleta cemetery (you've been there). There's a kind of abandonment that always recalls my attention: what one day was so important in our life -till the point of making a little monument to it- is always taken away by time (and life itself). We pass away, there's nobody else who care about it, and only remains the pieces of it and the naif illusion of eternity.
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