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Basque Aspen Art of the Sierra Nevada

Date:

Sundance Books & Music will hold a premier of Baobab Press’s latest release “Basque Aspen Art of the Sierra Nevada” by Jean Moore Earl and Phillip I. Earl

The Earls will sign and discuss forty years of locating, identifying, and preserving Basque sheepherder carvings, assembling over 100 wax-on-muslin rubbings made directly from tree carvings. Included are essays describing the sheepherders’ world, the style and content of the carvings and the Earls’ efforts to preserve them. Accompanying the text is a companion translation in the Basque language by noted Basque scholar Joxe Mallea-Olaetxe. Life-size muslin rubbings made by the Earls will be on display. Most of the actual tree carvings are now lost.

WHEN: Saturday, June 18, 11 am to 12:30 pm

WHERE: Sundance Books and Music, 121 California Ave., Nevada 89509 (775-786-1188)

TIME: Saturday June 18th, 11 am to 12:30 pm

Basque Aspen Art offers a unique look at a little-known aspect of immigrant culture in California and Nevada during the first half of the twentieth century. The years 1920 to 1950 were the high point of the sheep industry in the western U.S. The mountain meadows of the Sierra Nevada were an important source of summer forage, and Basque sheepherders, many recently arrived from the Pyrenees, were primarily responsible for tending the flocks.

The sheepherder’s life among the aspen groves was isolated and solitary, and it led many herders to utilize the trees as a means of self-expression. Using simple tools such as pocket knives or nails, they turned to the bark of the aspens. On this living canvas, they etched a remarkable series of carvings, recording everything from their own names to observations of the natural world around them, memories of the Basque Country, and not surprisingly, erotic fantasies. Over time, the living medium subtly altered the sheepherders’ work, and eventually doomed it. Most of the carvings are now lost.

AUTHOR BIOS

A native of Virginia, Jean Moore Earl grew up in the foothills of the Appalachians as part of a family with deep roots in the folk traditions of the region. Her interest in the documentation and preservation of traditional folk arts, crafts, and culture was further developed while attending Berea College in Berea, Kentucky. It was while working as a community health nurse in Reno that she first became acquainted with Basque culture, following home health visits to retired Basque sheepherders.

Phillip I. Earl has spent most of his life in Nevada. He received a master’s degree in history from the University of Nevada, Reno, in 1975. From 1975 to 1999, he served as Curator of History at the Nevada Historical Society; he is now Curator Emeritus. Mr. Earl has published extensively on Nevada and Western history for newspapers, magazines, and scholarly journals, and he is the author of This Was Nevada (1986) and This Was Nevada, Vol. II: The Comstock (2000).

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