On the dark, brooding surfaces of a basalt flow in the American Southwest, a moment of contact has been made permanent. These are not mere images, but direct impressions—pale handprints, stark and eloquent against the black rock, created by Ancestral Puebloan or earlier Archaic peoples. They were made not by painting, but by subtraction: patiently pecking away the dark, shiny desert varnish to reveal the lighter, vesicular stone beneath. The result is a negative image, a silhouette of presence, where the rock itself becomes the memory of skin and palm.

Each print is a simple, profound declaration. It speaks across millennia: “I was here.” This is not a claim of ownership, but of existence. It is an act of leaving a physical signature on the landscape, of saying, “My hand touched this place. I am part of its story.” The accompanying birds and abstract symbols may hold deeper, lost meanings—clan signs, prayers for flight or hunting, marks of a vision—but the hands are universally intelligible. They are intimacy fossilized.
Time, the patient sculptor, has not erased them but has begun a slow dialogue. Delicate crusts of grey and orange lichen creep around the edges, a new life form embracing the ancient mark. Cracks from frost and sun fracture the basalt, threatening to break the panel but also proving its endurance. Tenacious shrubs root in the rock’s own crevices, a testament to life’s persistence. The prints are being woven back into the ecology of the stone.
To stand before them is to experience a profound collapse of time. You are not looking at art; you are witnessing an act. You can almost feel the pressure of the palm, the spread of the fingers against the cool, rough stone. You become a witness to a moment of human connection with the world, a connection so vital it had to be etched into the planet’s very skin.
The rock, for its part, has kept its promise. It has held these gestures steady. While empires have risen and fallen, languages have been lost, and we, the modern observers, come and go with our fleeting concerns, the stone still answers. It cradles those ancient hands, a silent, enduring testament to the most fundamental human impulse: to reach out, to touch, and to leave behind a proof of our brief, beautiful pᴀssage.