Photographs by Peter Elliston
77 reproductions, 172 pages, 13" x 11"
Hardcover Edition: $85
Special Limited Edition: $950
Signed,
numbered, slipcased and custom-bound, the Special Limited Edition comes
with your choice of one of five photographs from the book for a price
substantially less than the photographs alone would cost.
About the book
Australian
physicist and photographer, Peter Elliston, packed his cumbersome
8x10-inch view camera and travelled over many years to eighteen
countries on four continents seeking out and photographing petrolgyphs
and pictographs, standing stones, monuments, and ancient ruins. In this
beautiful oversized book, each photograph is accompanied by commentary
by Elliston on the historical importance of each of the sites, or by
accounts by the nineteenth century archaeologists and explorers who
first discovered many of these places. The combination of photographs
and writing provide an extremely rich experience.
The photographs in Stones and
Marks have been reproduced to the highest possible standards:
incomparable 600-line screen quadtone printed on heavy coated stock
with specially modified inks on a unique, custom-designed Heidelberg
press. A sturdy French-fold dust jacket complements and protects the
book.
An
enduring curiosity about our past has led Peter Elliston to locate,
research, decode, and record the historically significant visual and
textual information found in Stones and Marks. In this book, Elliston’s
exquisite photographs are powerfully combined with his scholarly
writing. His sharp-focused photographs, made with an 8 x 10-inch view
camera, convey valuable descriptive information while revealing great
beauty. His research and writing enhance our knowledge about the sites
by drawing on the sketches and writings that early explorers and modern
archaeologists created in the same locations, and by providing
translations of ancient inscriptions, with information about who made
them and when. Perhaps most important, the remnants of the ancient
monuments link us to our past and offer profound connections. In Stones
and Marks, we learn about our ancestors—and, ultimately, about
ourselves as their successors.
"The
ancient stones speak. In every country our ancestors have left their
marks—inscriptions on rocks, standing stones, and monuments that are
being slowly eroded by natural forces and the indifference of humans.
From these remaining stones and marks, we are able to gather the scant,
seductive clues left behind by vanished civilizations—messages from the
silenced voices of our ancestors."