Aceptado para publicación:
31-octubre-2017
Recibido para revisión:
03-abril-2017
20
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
THE ONTOLOGY OF THE DOT
LA ONTOLOGÍA DEL PUNTO ARQUEOLÓGICO
RESUMEN
ABSTRACT
Along with the technics that allows archaeology to adopt a precise knowledge about the com-
position of the materiality, also exists a critical thought that claims for take into account expe-
rience, perception and creativity. In the latter, we find Art-Archaeology approach. With this at
background emerged the idea of the presence and the ontology of the ‘dot’ in archaeology, iden-
tified in the ongoing process of the attendance of a meeting at Kyoto, in the excavation of a
simulated site, in the survey of an unidentified site and in a short research about Prehistoric
tattoo. This idea, in its explicit simplicity, is part of a creative thought situated in the roots of
the archaeological practice. In this paper I reflect about this through an artistic photo-essay that
is at the same time an artistic and theoretical exercise, with the intention to identify the existen-
ce of the ‘dot’ in different dimensions of archaeology, and to make theory making art.
Keywords: archaeology; art; creativity; dot; theory.
Junto con las técnicas que permiten a la arqueología adoptar un conocimiento preciso sobre la
composición de la materialidad, existen otros modos de pensamiento crítico que frente a ello
reclaman tener en cuenta la experiencia, la percepción y la creatividad. Dentro de esta segunda
tendencia se encuentra la del Arte-Arqueología. Con ello en mente, en el transcurso de la asis-
tencia a un congreso en Kioto, en la excavación de un yacimiento simulado, de la prospección
de un yacimiento contemporáneo desconocido y de una pequeña investigación sobre el tatuaje
prehistórico, emergió la idea de la presencia y ontología del ‘punto’ en arqueología. Esta idea,
en su simpleza explícita, forma parte de un entramado de pensamientos creativos situados en
las bases de la práctica arqueológica, sobre los que se reflexiona en este trabajo a través de un
foto-ensayo artístico que es al mismo tiempo un ejercicio artístico y teórico, con la intención de
identificar la situación del ‘punto’ en diferentes dimensiones presentes en la arqueología y de
teorizar creando arte.
Palabras clave: arqueología; arte; creatividad; punto; teoría.
José Antonio Mármol Martínez
Universidad Complutense Madrid, España
tic78josemarmol@hotmail.com
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
21
INTRODUCTION
In this paper, I explore the constitution of a
concept, the archaeological dot, in the
process of making and visualizing a photo-
graphic essay. This is an ocularcentric and
visual work, in which a pre-stablished cate-
gory (the dot) is incorporated to the percep-
tion of the material world. I will use dots as
a hybrid entities identified in the ongoing
fieldwork. The aim is to exemplify an alter-
native to hegemonic techno-science, unders-
tanding the Past as a palimpsest created in
the hands of archaeologists whose labour
has been understood around textual, meta-
phorical concepts as deep digging, detective
work, cleaning and restoration of the frag-
mentation and so on (eg. Shanks and Pear-
son 2001). In this sense, objectivity is an
illusory category rooted in the natural practi-
ces of science located in the structure of
modernity (Fernández 2006). The study of
the Past is also concerned with senses,
nostalgias, melancholia, in a fluid world.
The first surrealist group of 1924 discovered
that under observable reality - this we classi-
fy with modernist, Renacentist categories
(Renfrew 2003) - there were another alterna-
tive worlds. The surrealists used these reali-
ties to critique the hegemonic culture which
led to injustices and deception after World
War I (Clifford 1988). Some of these artists,
like the Spanish Salvador Dalí, tried to com-
bine science and art under this point of view.
Others, like Michel Leiris or Georges Batai-
lle worked with the firsts important French
ethnographers, traveling to Africa for reco-
ver interesting objects (Clifford 1988). This
“ethnographic-surrealism” changed the
ethnography of that time by means to consi-
der alternative ontological realities apart of
the Western one.
Surrealism and ethnography also introduced
the very idea of fragmentation as category
for the analysis of the world. Although this
idea is based on some ocularcentric tropes
like the existence of a pre-abstract reality
which is re-built through the fragments, is to
say, a pre-establish plan of action guided by
the final income to be made, the idea is
about to break the naïve knowledge based
on artificial epistemologies. In the 30s, frag-
mentation appeared as the stratigraphic
understanding of these several realities.
Indeed psychologist Sigmund Freud was
seduced by this idea, like his work about the
stratigraphic excavation of the mind shows
(Simonetti 2015). This means that art and
archaeology, together from the beginnings
of epistemology, entered in a new field.
Archaeology and surrealism bumped into
each other, sharing much more than the idea
of stratigraphy.
Until the material turn, archaeology have
been long understood as a cultural produc-
tion, based on built something from the
union and interpretation of fragments. This
were accompanied with metaphors about
collage, assemblage, and so on, reinforced
by textual theory and the idea of the cons-
truction of knowledge (eg. Shanks 2001,
2012; Shanks and Pearson 2001). The incor-
poration of fieldwork to this production
made appear the concept of discovery.
Knowledge would be created by transfor-
ming materials of nature into significant
culture (Egdeworth 2003). This means to
think that things only exists if are transmu-
ted to culture, built over a given world. To
propose an alternative, we can talk about the
emergence of knowledge: far from dichoto-
mic concepts (nature/culture, body/mind,
etc.) knowledge would emerge in the physi-
cal correspondence with the world, through
senses -there is not a clear boundary
between these dichotomies, since all are
incorporated to the ongoing work in antici-
pation (Ingold 2001, 2013; Ingold and
Hallam 2007). It is not to make something
cultural from nature, but let things to emerge
in action where we can incorporate all kinds
of knowledge (Simonetti 2013, 2015). We
are guided by the ontology of materials, not
by the understandings of the record as a text
nor materials as source for culture as separa-
ted fields. Things owns live stories far from
our control. Like surrealists, we must accept
the existence of several ontological realities.
This proposition is epitomized in this
photo-essay. This work involves a theoreti-
cal reflection on the creative processes of
the archaeological practice through pairs of
photographs. In every case, the first photo
tries to represent a part of the site over which
the 'archaeological dot' is superimposed, a
kind of epistemological intervention that
guide our interpretation of the site, in the
second pic. This let us to question issues of
epistemology and ontology in the fieldwork.
It is there the archaeological dot? Do it
exist? It is just a category? How the practice
is modified by dots? The identification of
the dot means to mobilize many resources
from its perception, the shoot of the camera,
the digital edition, and so on. In all these
steps of the process memories, intentions
and senses raised up -it is not just a mental
or cultural work.
In recent times, we have seen the apparition
of new interesting approaches on the line of
Art-Archaeology and Creative Archaeolo-
gies. Many artworks from contemporary
artists has been used to exemplify theoreti-
cal concepts or to explain the art of the
people of the Past (eg. Renfrew 2003;
Cochrane and Russell 2013; Valdez-Tullet
and Chittock 2016 among others). In theore-
tical terms, art opens new creative ways to
understand the nature of archaeology.
However, the point is to not to understand
art as modernist production of final incomes
to be seen, but as creative processes that lies
in every movements of life. It is not art
history nor the analysis of artworks of
others; actually, it is not about definitive
specular results, artworks. It is about a crea-
tive attitude towards archaeological practi-
ce. This approach, in my opinion, differs
from the textual approach to theory and
practice. Therefore, in this paper, I do not
follow a distinction between art and theory;
my aim is to present a practical framework
to understand the archaeological assump-
tions proposed.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
22
In this paper, I explore the constitution of a
concept, the archaeological dot, in the
process of making and visualizing a photo-
graphic essay. This is an ocularcentric and
visual work, in which a pre-stablished cate-
gory (the dot) is incorporated to the percep-
tion of the material world. I will use dots as
a hybrid entities identified in the ongoing
fieldwork. The aim is to exemplify an alter-
native to hegemonic techno-science, unders-
tanding the Past as a palimpsest created in
the hands of archaeologists whose labour
has been understood around textual, meta-
phorical concepts as deep digging, detective
work, cleaning and restoration of the frag-
mentation and so on (eg. Shanks and Pear-
son 2001). In this sense, objectivity is an
illusory category rooted in the natural practi-
ces of science located in the structure of
modernity (Fernández 2006). The study of
the Past is also concerned with senses,
nostalgias, melancholia, in a fluid world.
The first surrealist group of 1924 discovered
that under observable reality - this we classi-
fy with modernist, Renacentist categories
(Renfrew 2003) - there were another alterna-
tive worlds. The surrealists used these reali-
ties to critique the hegemonic culture which
led to injustices and deception after World
War I (Clifford 1988). Some of these artists,
like the Spanish Salvador Dalí, tried to com-
bine science and art under this point of view.
Others, like Michel Leiris or Georges Batai-
lle worked with the firsts important French
ethnographers, traveling to Africa for reco-
ver interesting objects (Clifford 1988). This
“ethnographic-surrealism” changed the
ethnography of that time by means to consi-
der alternative ontological realities apart of
the Western one.
Surrealism and ethnography also introduced
the very idea of fragmentation as category
for the analysis of the world. Although this
idea is based on some ocularcentric tropes
like the existence of a pre-abstract reality
which is re-built through the fragments, is to
say, a pre-establish plan of action guided by
the final income to be made, the idea is
about to break the naïve knowledge based
on artificial epistemologies. In the 30s, frag-
mentation appeared as the stratigraphic
understanding of these several realities.
Indeed psychologist Sigmund Freud was
seduced by this idea, like his work about the
stratigraphic excavation of the mind shows
(Simonetti 2015). This means that art and
archaeology, together from the beginnings
of epistemology, entered in a new field.
Archaeology and surrealism bumped into
each other, sharing much more than the idea
of stratigraphy.
Until the material turn, archaeology have
been long understood as a cultural produc-
tion, based on built something from the
union and interpretation of fragments. This
were accompanied with metaphors about
collage, assemblage, and so on, reinforced
by textual theory and the idea of the cons-
truction of knowledge (eg. Shanks 2001,
2012; Shanks and Pearson 2001). The incor-
poration of fieldwork to this production
made appear the concept of discovery.
Knowledge would be created by transfor-
ming materials of nature into significant
culture (Egdeworth 2003). This means to
think that things only exists if are transmu-
ted to culture, built over a given world. To
propose an alternative, we can talk about the
emergence of knowledge: far from dichoto-
mic concepts (nature/culture, body/mind,
etc.) knowledge would emerge in the physi-
cal correspondence with the world, through
senses -there is not a clear boundary
between these dichotomies, since all are
incorporated to the ongoing work in antici-
pation (Ingold 2001, 2013; Ingold and
Hallam 2007). It is not to make something
cultural from nature, but let things to emerge
in action where we can incorporate all kinds
of knowledge (Simonetti 2013, 2015). We
are guided by the ontology of materials, not
by the understandings of the record as a text
nor materials as source for culture as separa-
ted fields. Things owns live stories far from
our control. Like surrealists, we must accept
the existence of several ontological realities.
This proposition is epitomized in this
photo-essay. This work involves a theoreti-
cal reflection on the creative processes of
the archaeological practice through pairs of
photographs. In every case, the first photo
tries to represent a part of the site over which
the 'archaeological dot' is superimposed, a
kind of epistemological intervention that
guide our interpretation of the site, in the
second pic. This let us to question issues of
epistemology and ontology in the fieldwork.
It is there the archaeological dot? Do it
exist? It is just a category? How the practice
is modified by dots? The identification of
the dot means to mobilize many resources
from its perception, the shoot of the camera,
the digital edition, and so on. In all these
steps of the process memories, intentions
and senses raised up -it is not just a mental
or cultural work.
In recent times, we have seen the apparition
of new interesting approaches on the line of
Art-Archaeology and Creative Archaeolo-
gies. Many artworks from contemporary
artists has been used to exemplify theoreti-
cal concepts or to explain the art of the
people of the Past (eg. Renfrew 2003;
Cochrane and Russell 2013; Valdez-Tullet
and Chittock 2016 among others). In theore-
tical terms, art opens new creative ways to
understand the nature of archaeology.
However, the point is to not to understand
art as modernist production of final incomes
to be seen, but as creative processes that lies
in every movements of life. It is not art
history nor the analysis of artworks of
others; actually, it is not about definitive
specular results, artworks. It is about a crea-
tive attitude towards archaeological practi-
ce. This approach, in my opinion, differs
from the textual approach to theory and
practice. Therefore, in this paper, I do not
follow a distinction between art and theory;
my aim is to present a practical framework
to understand the archaeological assump-
tions proposed.
The idea of this essay comes to me at Kyoto,
Japan, when I attended the eight World
Archaeological Congress (WAC-8) 2016,
where due to the Japanese understandings of
creativity I started to think about art such in
a way far from genuine authorship and inno-
vative originality. As an archaeologist and
artist, it represented a long way to walk.
The artwork I propose, “The ontology of the
dot”, is about the use of the 'dot' -or 'point',
as in Spanish we use the same word for
both- in actions at archaeological contexts,
understanding the 'dot' as a concrete physi-
cal place that articulates several dimensions
of archaeological practice, in which it's
possible to superimpose one of the defini-
tions given for the 'dot'. However, this will
be explained later. The artwork was created
in several spaces where I identified new uses
for this. Therefore, I took photographs along
all my archaeological activity in 2016, in the
excavation at a simulated site; in the survey
of an unidentified site in Monte Miravete
(Murcia, Spain); in the short research about
prehistoric tattoo; and in the attendance of a
congress. The search for these points were
then extended to both simple and complex
fieldwork, paper lecture, and meeting expe-
rience.
METHODOLOGY
In these activities I identified some points
that, looked at the distance, gave the sense of
unity. Carefully observation shows how
these points are like material anchors to
movements, attitudes, boundaries, memo-
ries, knowledge and signification, moving
all the fieldwork around them. Indeed field-
work are based on the accumulation of this
kind of dots. However, it is not common to
treat these points as epistemologically
relevant elements. Since these points
depends of a visual identification in my
essay, the question is if these points could be
also ontological.
So, guided by inspiration and informed by
photo-ethnography (a kind of ethnographic
method based on informal visual material in
which perception and experience are privile-
ged in interpretation at the expense of
textual categories, see eg. Moreno 2013), I
shoot with both my smartphone’s camera
and my reflex camera once I identify one of
these dots. There was not any technical or
specific aesthetic requirements, and in most
cases, the pic was product of casualty. The
only pre-defined issue was the frame of the
pic in order to not to lose any contextual
detail. Once the pic was done, I keep it sepa-
rately on a digital folder, with dates, infor-
mation, thoughts, and so on. I edited every
pic with PhotoScape software to convert
them on black and white in order to be able
to identify easily the original from the edited
one. Then I created a digital document
where I introduced every pair of pics, hori-
zontally. The last step was to mark out
where I identified the dot, using a grey
circular-shape figure.
These pics are presented in pairs, in a dual
opposition where we can see a part of the
site and the edited image in black and white
with the grey point indicating where I identi-
fied the archaeological dot. With this, we
can compare our own awareness of the dot
in the unedited pic in comparison with the
edited one in which I act as guider for the
viewer, and then corroborate how epistemo-
logy is randomly superimposed to ontologi-
cal world.
Of course, it is not an unproblematic exerci-
se. First, because even the original photogra-
ph is in itself a mediation between materials
and the representation, spectators, and
author. The veracity of the pic is just in the
belief of its nature as record. Second, the
action inside the essay is only visual, about
spectators and artifacts to be seen, this
seems to be contrary to my intention to
avoid ocularcentrism. Beyond these two
apparently contradictions, the visual-essay
works just as inspirational exercise if the
viewer is able to incorporate its own expe-
riences to it. Therefore, here is not any aspi-
ration to truth.
tion? The visual essay I propose plays with
irony when identify textual symbols, dots,
over the material world. Instead of start from
pre-stablished texts, texts are being created
through the visual interpretation of inexis-
tent textual symbols.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
23
The idea of this essay comes to me at Kyoto,
Japan, when I attended the eight World
Archaeological Congress (WAC-8) 2016,
where due to the Japanese understandings of
creativity I started to think about art such in
a way far from genuine authorship and inno-
vative originality. As an archaeologist and
artist, it represented a long way to walk.
The artwork I propose, “The ontology of the
dot”, is about the use of the 'dot' -or 'point',
as in Spanish we use the same word for
both- in actions at archaeological contexts,
understanding the 'dot' as a concrete physi-
cal place that articulates several dimensions
of archaeological practice, in which it's
possible to superimpose one of the defini-
tions given for the 'dot'. However, this will
be explained later. The artwork was created
in several spaces where I identified new uses
for this. Therefore, I took photographs along
all my archaeological activity in 2016, in the
excavation at a simulated site; in the survey
of an unidentified site in Monte Miravete
(Murcia, Spain); in the short research about
prehistoric tattoo; and in the attendance of a
congress. The search for these points were
then extended to both simple and complex
fieldwork, paper lecture, and meeting expe-
rience.
ART-ARCHAEOLOGY
AS APPROACH
In these activities I identified some points
that, looked at the distance, gave the sense of
unity. Carefully observation shows how
these points are like material anchors to
movements, attitudes, boundaries, memo-
ries, knowledge and signification, moving
all the fieldwork around them. Indeed field-
work are based on the accumulation of this
kind of dots. However, it is not common to
treat these points as epistemologically
relevant elements. Since these points
depends of a visual identification in my
essay, the question is if these points could be
also ontological.
So, guided by inspiration and informed by
photo-ethnography (a kind of ethnographic
method based on informal visual material in
which perception and experience are privile-
ged in interpretation at the expense of
textual categories, see eg. Moreno 2013), I
shoot with both my smartphone’s camera
and my reflex camera once I identify one of
these dots. There was not any technical or
specific aesthetic requirements, and in most
cases, the pic was product of casualty. The
only pre-defined issue was the frame of the
pic in order to not to lose any contextual
detail. Once the pic was done, I keep it sepa-
rately on a digital folder, with dates, infor-
mation, thoughts, and so on. I edited every
pic with PhotoScape software to convert
them on black and white in order to be able
to identify easily the original from the edited
one. Then I created a digital document
where I introduced every pair of pics, hori-
zontally. The last step was to mark out
where I identified the dot, using a grey
circular-shape figure.
These pics are presented in pairs, in a dual
opposition where we can see a part of the
site and the edited image in black and white
with the grey point indicating where I identi-
fied the archaeological dot. With this, we
can compare our own awareness of the dot
in the unedited pic in comparison with the
edited one in which I act as guider for the
viewer, and then corroborate how epistemo-
logy is randomly superimposed to ontologi-
cal world.
Of course, it is not an unproblematic exerci-
se. First, because even the original photogra-
ph is in itself a mediation between materials
and the representation, spectators, and
author. The veracity of the pic is just in the
belief of its nature as record. Second, the
action inside the essay is only visual, about
spectators and artifacts to be seen, this
seems to be contrary to my intention to
avoid ocularcentrism. Beyond these two
apparently contradictions, the visual-essay
works just as inspirational exercise if the
viewer is able to incorporate its own expe-
riences to it. Therefore, here is not any aspi-
ration to truth.
In the context of the material turn, the
distance between abstract theory and physi-
cal world is more narrow day per day (Gon-
zález-Ruibal 2012). In this interstice, art for
theory has reach our discipline bringing new
ways to understand materiality.
It is clear that the techniques and thoughts of
artists has been used to do science along the
time, as we can see in the work of Leonardo
or in the notion of science as “art of…”, of
the Renaissance. Our categories to organize
reality comes from these times in which
descriptions were made by the use of
drawings (Renfrew 2003).
This is also clear in the first’s ethnographies
done by the Spanish priests in the communi-
ties they contacted with, through methods
based on drawings with the aim to give faith
about what they saw. Now, art historians
analyze many of these depictions. The same
situation happens when we talk about
archaeological drawings if we understand
them just as visual artifacts. Further reflec-
tions arises through Joseph Kosuth's “One
and three Chairs” (1965) where a reflection
about issues of veracity, representation,
textuality and ontology could be made.
A critical attitude towards archaeology ask
for question taken for granted assumptions.
These kind of reflections has been made in
recent years in the works about critical
theory (eg. Fernández 2006), and by alterna-
tive understandings of knowledge, like
senses studies (eg. Hamilakis 2014; Simone-
tti 2013; Ingold 2013), the peripatetic video
(Weebmor 2005; Witmore 2006; also Van
Dyke 2006), or sounds (Witmore 2004), etc.
Other works put their focus on the limita-
tions of methodology, through archaeologi-
cal ethnography (eg. Hamilakis, Pluciennik,
and Tarlow 2001; Hamilakis and Anag-
nostopoulos 2009; Hamilakis, Anagnosto-
poulos and Ifantidis 2009; Edgeworth 2010,
2006, 2003; Castañeda and Matthews 2008;
among others). In line with these alternative
understandings of the practice, we find
themes mixing art and archaeology (eg.
Tilley, Hamilton, and Bender 2000; Shanks
and Pearson 2001; Shanks 2004, 2012;
Valdez-Tullet and Chittock 2016; Cochrane
and Russell 2013; Georghiu and Barth 2018,
incoming; Marmol 2017, among others). As
we saw above, this last theme could be
re-defined far from the prevalence of final
incomes, especially with proposals from
Art-Anthropology (eg. Ingold and Hallam
2007; also Schneider 2017).
In this line, art understood as creative
process allow us to focus on a difference:
while techno-science present a propositional
approach to the world, based on the search
of truth, specular artifacts, and final results,
art provides a non-propositional, practical
and growing knowledge. It does not need to
be explained and depend more on experien-
ce and perception than to schemes of
description.
The relation between art and archaeology in
practice has been common as exemplify “Le
dejeuner sous l’herbe” (1983) by the French
artist Daniel Spoerri and the French
archaeologist Jean-Paul Demoulé, among
other examples, especially from British
artists like Mark Dion with his “Tate
Thames Dig” (1999-2000). In addition, we
can find examples all over the world like the
Art&Archaeology Forum in Kyoto, Japan,
where artists are invited to collaborate with
archaeologists. More archaeo-artistic coin-
cidences could be found in the archaeologi-
cal fieldwork in the Monte Miravete site at
Murcia (Spain), done by a strong Art-Ar-
chaeology approach. My personal experien-
ce involves also our work in the Archaeo-
drome, a fake archaeological site of 5x5
meters square where we do artistic and
archaeological practices (figure 1).
In this place, I identified several processes
about collection, fragmentation and earthing
(opposed to excavation) in the ongoing
process of the creation of the entire site that
involved performance and aesthetics,
memories and improvisation. This was
conceptualized in my artwork “Archaeolo-
gical Contra-Museum” presented at Sighta-
tions exhibition at Southampton, UK (TAG
meeting 2016).
More examples around aesthetics are the
works of the Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei, who
use elements of the Chinese Heritage to
create pieces through destroying real
archaeological artifacts as Neolithic urns
from the Han period (“Han dynasty urn”
(1995), “Han Dynasty urn with Coca-cola
logo” (1994)). Other artists working on field
are Arman with his ‘packed’ rubbish-art;
Simon Fujiwara with his works “Phallusies”
(2010) and “Frozen’s” (2010); Daniel
Guzman and his artwork about the presence
of the archaeological in the daily life throu-
gh his piece “La dificultad de cruzar un
campo de tierra cualquiera” (2012); and also
great painters like Picasso who used prehis-
toric art as inspiration. We could find many
artists like Dragos Georghiu or Richard
Long in Land art, and interesting proposals
in Conceptual art, such Duchamp itself, and
his understanding of art as materialization of
ideas. One of my favorite art style is Street
art because involves the creation of new
sites through changing the meanings of the
public space. The creation of art is an
archaeological evidence itself, because the
artwork always would represent the artist's
agency (according to art anthropologist
Alfred Gell, in Layton 2003:450). I do not
think so -art would be archaeological due to
common creative processes, not because
superimposed abstractions, as agency, to
final incomes to be seen.
About photography and ethnography
To avoid ocularcentrism in this visual enter-
prise, I decided to manage a direct observa-
tion and participation on the field, and then
recorded with ethnographic methods. Some
authors in archaeological ethnography have
pointed out that archaeological knowledge
is not only built with social organization and
hierarchies (eg. Edgeworth 2006), but is
discovered in the practice where natural raw
materials are transformed into cultural infor-
mation (Edgeworth 2003). As I explained
above, I think instead that knowledge emer-
ges in the practice. My interest to include
senses to ethnography then led me to
photo-ethnography (Moreno 2013), and to
the work of Hamilakis and Infantidis (2016)
in Kalaureia (Poros, Greece) which I use as
inspiration for my own photo-ethnography
at Monte Miravete site (Murcia, Spain)
(Marmol 2016, incoming). This kind of
approach combines anthropology, archaeo-
logy and art.
It make contrast with the techno-quantitati-
ve methods popular in current archaeologi-
cal research. Like a secret path in the hege-
mony of the visual, it is a form of auto-eth-
nography where reflexivity is opposed to
traditional distances of the research like the
Others context, observations, interviews,
narratives, and so on. It turns its interests to
all subjects and contexts of research. These
elements not depends of the skills of a
photographer or videographer, because they
have value anyhow -it moves between the
academic and the artistic (Moreno 2013).
The mainstream conception is that the
intemporality of photography, the photogra-
phs as immutable mobile artifacts (Van
Dyke 2006) would make them good tools
for support the processes of social analysis
(Moreno 2013). However, photography is
not independent. If we understand them as
cultural artifacts, they are more than a repre-
sentation of reality. We find in them discour-
ses that imposes its own regimes of signifi-
cation, requiring a context of interpretation
to understand its meanings. To going deep
into them is to discover social relationships
of production, consume, power, knowledge,
etc., modern relations that confirms our
distance from the reality seen. In ocularcen-
tric terms, to photograph is a social action
and not only a merely technic achievement
(Moreno 2013). Its truth, to follow a Fou-
cauldian concept, is an effect of power. Once
decoded its contents, the pic can become an
artifact full of symbolic potential (Moreno
2013), almost a thing that could be object of
archaeological analysis, like the pics of
Syrian refugee’s materiality at Lesbos
(Greece) done by the journalist Santi Pala-
cios.
In photo-ethnography, the pic is not only a
passive artifact for illustration of acts but
also allows visualizing concepts and facts
to which understand environments, bodily
dispositions and relational interactions (Mo-
reno 2013). The visual sources used for this
kind of ethnography may be selected from
unintentional records like selfies, scientific
photographies of materials, pics from the
excavation, newspaper or even papers and
meetings. Through photography, it is possi-
ble to capture these details of daily life to be
analyzed, and to incorporate the “native
voice” of the people represented in its inter-
pretation (Moreno 2013:128). Here the
visually of the artifact go further than textual
incomes such descriptions, since provokes
the emergence of free expression, sensibili-
ties produced at the moment of the shoot,
and to “think with eyes and hands” (Ruiz
Zapatero 2014:65. Translation mine). In the
moment of the shoot, the materiality of the
camera, the hands, the eyes, the knowledge
and the intentions of the author, and the
always changing material world to be captu-
red are corresponding to each other, making
possible the moment of photography in the
conjunction of all of them. Independently of
the result, this process implies a great capa-
city of improvisation that makes the photo-
graph an incidental income of the ethnogra-
phic process.
In archaeological photography, we add
another element of signification, the
memory (Ruiz Zapatero 2014:56). Inside
every photograph, there are several tempo-
ralities, making memory a guiding exercise
to be made. However, its intention of 'truth'
hides its potential and free signification, as
happens with the struggle between needless-
ly to be explained art, and scientific obliga-
tory explanation.
It is common to think there is a ‘strategy of
representation’ that constitutes under inten-
tional agendas what is represented (Ruiz
2014; Van Dyke 2006). This heterogeneous
understanding needs an sceptic attitude
which start with doubting about the photo-
graphic veracity itself: considering Karl
Heiders concept 'Rashômon effect' (Heider
1988) we are aware of the several interpreta-
tions, equally rightful, that archaeologists
have, which are in conflict with the ones of
others. There is not a unique truth even in
the simplest processes like photography.
The photograph have an evocative power
articulating stories and connecting different
memories, sometimes about a moment that
does not already exist (Shanks and Svabo
2013; Ruiz 2014). They connects the unreal
with the real, recreating new experiences
providing new meanings (Webmoor 2005).
Then the world appears as an entity that can
be captured, paused a divided into stable
temporal periods (Bergson 1963). The pic
requires the use of an archaeological imagi-
nation (eg. Shanks 2012), more sensual than
textual. Photographs are itself a mystery that
the viewer has to decode, making emerge
inspirational sensations and close relations
between time and space, bodies and
artifacts.
Under specular terms, the object of study is
approached from the aesthetic, in the limits
of a mainstream analysis, which along
objectification, institutionalization and
legitimation establish such conditions for
the analysis of collective production of
knowledge (Moreno 2013).
What photo-ethnography proposes is to
transcend the artificial limitations of our
subjects of study through sensibilities, with
the addition of other corporal, sensual
elements and kinetics that participate in the
flowing of the reality that has been 'captu-
red'. Symbols, signs, attitudes, gestures, and
footprints, from all these the photo-ethno-
grapher obtain new perspectives about
signification (Moreno 2013). Why just sepa-
rate all this experience in little parts to fit
them into strictly processes of classifica-
tion? The visual essay I propose plays with
irony when identify textual symbols, dots,
over the material world. Instead of start from
pre-stablished texts, texts are being created
through the visual interpretation of inexis-
tent textual symbols.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
24
In the context of the material turn, the
distance between abstract theory and physi-
cal world is more narrow day per day (Gon-
zález-Ruibal 2012). In this interstice, art for
theory has reach our discipline bringing new
ways to understand materiality.
It is clear that the techniques and thoughts of
artists has been used to do science along the
time, as we can see in the work of Leonardo
or in the notion of science as “art of…”, of
the Renaissance. Our categories to organize
reality comes from these times in which
descriptions were made by the use of
drawings (Renfrew 2003).
This is also clear in the first’s ethnographies
done by the Spanish priests in the communi-
ties they contacted with, through methods
based on drawings with the aim to give faith
about what they saw. Now, art historians
analyze many of these depictions. The same
situation happens when we talk about
archaeological drawings if we understand
them just as visual artifacts. Further reflec-
tions arises through Joseph Kosuth's “One
and three Chairs” (1965) where a reflection
about issues of veracity, representation,
textuality and ontology could be made.
A critical attitude towards archaeology ask
for question taken for granted assumptions.
These kind of reflections has been made in
recent years in the works about critical
theory (eg. Fernández 2006), and by alterna-
tive understandings of knowledge, like
senses studies (eg. Hamilakis 2014; Simone-
tti 2013; Ingold 2013), the peripatetic video
(Weebmor 2005; Witmore 2006; also Van
Dyke 2006), or sounds (Witmore 2004), etc.
Other works put their focus on the limita-
tions of methodology, through archaeologi-
cal ethnography (eg. Hamilakis, Pluciennik,
and Tarlow 2001; Hamilakis and Anag-
nostopoulos 2009; Hamilakis, Anagnosto-
poulos and Ifantidis 2009; Edgeworth 2010,
2006, 2003; Castañeda and Matthews 2008;
among others). In line with these alternative
understandings of the practice, we find
themes mixing art and archaeology (eg.
Tilley, Hamilton, and Bender 2000; Shanks
and Pearson 2001; Shanks 2004, 2012;
Valdez-Tullet and Chittock 2016; Cochrane
and Russell 2013; Georghiu and Barth 2018,
incoming; Marmol 2017, among others). As
we saw above, this last theme could be
re-defined far from the prevalence of final
incomes, especially with proposals from
Art-Anthropology (eg. Ingold and Hallam
2007; also Schneider 2017).
In this line, art understood as creative
process allow us to focus on a difference:
while techno-science present a propositional
approach to the world, based on the search
of truth, specular artifacts, and final results,
art provides a non-propositional, practical
and growing knowledge. It does not need to
be explained and depend more on experien-
ce and perception than to schemes of
description.
The relation between art and archaeology in
practice has been common as exemplify “Le
dejeuner sous l’herbe” (1983) by the French
artist Daniel Spoerri and the French
archaeologist Jean-Paul Demoulé, among
other examples, especially from British
artists like Mark Dion with his “Tate
Thames Dig” (1999-2000). In addition, we
can find examples all over the world like the
Art&Archaeology Forum in Kyoto, Japan,
where artists are invited to collaborate with
archaeologists. More archaeo-artistic coin-
cidences could be found in the archaeologi-
cal fieldwork in the Monte Miravete site at
Murcia (Spain), done by a strong Art-Ar-
chaeology approach. My personal experien-
ce involves also our work in the Archaeo-
drome, a fake archaeological site of 5x5
meters square where we do artistic and
archaeological practices (figure 1).
In this place, I identified several processes
about collection, fragmentation and earthing
(opposed to excavation) in the ongoing
process of the creation of the entire site that
involved performance and aesthetics,
memories and improvisation. This was
conceptualized in my artwork “Archaeolo-
gical Contra-Museum” presented at Sighta-
tions exhibition at Southampton, UK (TAG
meeting 2016).
More examples around aesthetics are the
works of the Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei, who
use elements of the Chinese Heritage to
create pieces through destroying real
archaeological artifacts as Neolithic urns
from the Han period (“Han dynasty urn”
(1995), “Han Dynasty urn with Coca-cola
logo” (1994)). Other artists working on field
are Arman with his ‘packed’ rubbish-art;
Simon Fujiwara with his works “Phallusies”
(2010) and “Frozen’s” (2010); Daniel
Guzman and his artwork about the presence
of the archaeological in the daily life throu-
gh his piece “La dificultad de cruzar un
campo de tierra cualquiera” (2012); and also
great painters like Picasso who used prehis-
toric art as inspiration. We could find many
artists like Dragos Georghiu or Richard
Long in Land art, and interesting proposals
in Conceptual art, such Duchamp itself, and
his understanding of art as materialization of
ideas. One of my favorite art style is Street
art because involves the creation of new
sites through changing the meanings of the
public space. The creation of art is an
archaeological evidence itself, because the
artwork always would represent the artist's
agency (according to art anthropologist
Alfred Gell, in Layton 2003:450). I do not
think so -art would be archaeological due to
common creative processes, not because
superimposed abstractions, as agency, to
final incomes to be seen.
About photography and ethnography
To avoid ocularcentrism in this visual enter-
prise, I decided to manage a direct observa-
tion and participation on the field, and then
recorded with ethnographic methods. Some
authors in archaeological ethnography have
pointed out that archaeological knowledge
is not only built with social organization and
hierarchies (eg. Edgeworth 2006), but is
discovered in the practice where natural raw
materials are transformed into cultural infor-
mation (Edgeworth 2003). As I explained
above, I think instead that knowledge emer-
ges in the practice. My interest to include
senses to ethnography then led me to
photo-ethnography (Moreno 2013), and to
the work of Hamilakis and Infantidis (2016)
in Kalaureia (Poros, Greece) which I use as
inspiration for my own photo-ethnography
at Monte Miravete site (Murcia, Spain)
(Marmol 2016, incoming). This kind of
approach combines anthropology, archaeo-
logy and art.
It make contrast with the techno-quantitati-
ve methods popular in current archaeologi-
cal research. Like a secret path in the hege-
mony of the visual, it is a form of auto-eth-
nography where reflexivity is opposed to
traditional distances of the research like the
Others context, observations, interviews,
narratives, and so on. It turns its interests to
all subjects and contexts of research. These
elements not depends of the skills of a
photographer or videographer, because they
have value anyhow -it moves between the
academic and the artistic (Moreno 2013).
The mainstream conception is that the
intemporality of photography, the photogra-
phs as immutable mobile artifacts (Van
Dyke 2006) would make them good tools
for support the processes of social analysis
(Moreno 2013). However, photography is
not independent. If we understand them as
cultural artifacts, they are more than a repre-
sentation of reality. We find in them discour-
ses that imposes its own regimes of signifi-
cation, requiring a context of interpretation
to understand its meanings. To going deep
into them is to discover social relationships
of production, consume, power, knowledge,
etc., modern relations that confirms our
distance from the reality seen. In ocularcen-
tric terms, to photograph is a social action
and not only a merely technic achievement
(Moreno 2013). Its truth, to follow a Fou-
cauldian concept, is an effect of power. Once
decoded its contents, the pic can become an
artifact full of symbolic potential (Moreno
2013), almost a thing that could be object of
archaeological analysis, like the pics of
Syrian refugee’s materiality at Lesbos
(Greece) done by the journalist Santi Pala-
cios.
In photo-ethnography, the pic is not only a
passive artifact for illustration of acts but
also allows visualizing concepts and facts
to which understand environments, bodily
dispositions and relational interactions (Mo-
reno 2013). The visual sources used for this
kind of ethnography may be selected from
unintentional records like selfies, scientific
photographies of materials, pics from the
excavation, newspaper or even papers and
meetings. Through photography, it is possi-
ble to capture these details of daily life to be
analyzed, and to incorporate the “native
voice” of the people represented in its inter-
pretation (Moreno 2013:128). Here the
visually of the artifact go further than textual
incomes such descriptions, since provokes
the emergence of free expression, sensibili-
ties produced at the moment of the shoot,
and to “think with eyes and hands” (Ruiz
Zapatero 2014:65. Translation mine). In the
moment of the shoot, the materiality of the
camera, the hands, the eyes, the knowledge
and the intentions of the author, and the
always changing material world to be captu-
red are corresponding to each other, making
possible the moment of photography in the
conjunction of all of them. Independently of
the result, this process implies a great capa-
city of improvisation that makes the photo-
graph an incidental income of the ethnogra-
phic process.
In archaeological photography, we add
another element of signification, the
memory (Ruiz Zapatero 2014:56). Inside
every photograph, there are several tempo-
ralities, making memory a guiding exercise
to be made. However, its intention of 'truth'
hides its potential and free signification, as
happens with the struggle between needless-
ly to be explained art, and scientific obliga-
tory explanation.
It is common to think there is a ‘strategy of
representation’ that constitutes under inten-
tional agendas what is represented (Ruiz
2014; Van Dyke 2006). This heterogeneous
understanding needs an sceptic attitude
which start with doubting about the photo-
graphic veracity itself: considering Karl
Heiders concept 'Rashômon effect' (Heider
1988) we are aware of the several interpreta-
tions, equally rightful, that archaeologists
have, which are in conflict with the ones of
others. There is not a unique truth even in
the simplest processes like photography.
The photograph have an evocative power
articulating stories and connecting different
memories, sometimes about a moment that
does not already exist (Shanks and Svabo
2013; Ruiz 2014). They connects the unreal
with the real, recreating new experiences
providing new meanings (Webmoor 2005).
Then the world appears as an entity that can
be captured, paused a divided into stable
temporal periods (Bergson 1963). The pic
requires the use of an archaeological imagi-
nation (eg. Shanks 2012), more sensual than
textual. Photographs are itself a mystery that
the viewer has to decode, making emerge
inspirational sensations and close relations
between time and space, bodies and
artifacts.
Under specular terms, the object of study is
approached from the aesthetic, in the limits
of a mainstream analysis, which along
objectification, institutionalization and
legitimation establish such conditions for
the analysis of collective production of
knowledge (Moreno 2013).
What photo-ethnography proposes is to
transcend the artificial limitations of our
subjects of study through sensibilities, with
the addition of other corporal, sensual
elements and kinetics that participate in the
flowing of the reality that has been 'captu-
red'. Symbols, signs, attitudes, gestures, and
footprints, from all these the photo-ethno-
grapher obtain new perspectives about
signification (Moreno 2013). Why just sepa-
rate all this experience in little parts to fit
them into strictly processes of classifica-
tion? The visual essay I propose plays with
irony when identify textual symbols, dots,
over the material world. Instead of start from
pre-stablished texts, texts are being created
through the visual interpretation of inexis-
tent textual symbols.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
25
In the context of the material turn, the
distance between abstract theory and physi-
cal world is more narrow day per day (Gon-
zález-Ruibal 2012). In this interstice, art for
theory has reach our discipline bringing new
ways to understand materiality.
It is clear that the techniques and thoughts of
artists has been used to do science along the
time, as we can see in the work of Leonardo
or in the notion of science as “art of…”, of
the Renaissance. Our categories to organize
reality comes from these times in which
descriptions were made by the use of
drawings (Renfrew 2003).
This is also clear in the first’s ethnographies
done by the Spanish priests in the communi-
ties they contacted with, through methods
based on drawings with the aim to give faith
about what they saw. Now, art historians
analyze many of these depictions. The same
situation happens when we talk about
archaeological drawings if we understand
them just as visual artifacts. Further reflec-
tions arises through Joseph Kosuth's “One
and three Chairs” (1965) where a reflection
about issues of veracity, representation,
textuality and ontology could be made.
A critical attitude towards archaeology ask
for question taken for granted assumptions.
These kind of reflections has been made in
recent years in the works about critical
theory (eg. Fernández 2006), and by alterna-
tive understandings of knowledge, like
senses studies (eg. Hamilakis 2014; Simone-
tti 2013; Ingold 2013), the peripatetic video
(Weebmor 2005; Witmore 2006; also Van
Dyke 2006), or sounds (Witmore 2004), etc.
Other works put their focus on the limita-
tions of methodology, through archaeologi-
cal ethnography (eg. Hamilakis, Pluciennik,
and Tarlow 2001; Hamilakis and Anag-
nostopoulos 2009; Hamilakis, Anagnosto-
poulos and Ifantidis 2009; Edgeworth 2010,
2006, 2003; Castañeda and Matthews 2008;
among others). In line with these alternative
understandings of the practice, we find
themes mixing art and archaeology (eg.
Tilley, Hamilton, and Bender 2000; Shanks
and Pearson 2001; Shanks 2004, 2012;
Valdez-Tullet and Chittock 2016; Cochrane
and Russell 2013; Georghiu and Barth 2018,
incoming; Marmol 2017, among others). As
we saw above, this last theme could be
re-defined far from the prevalence of final
incomes, especially with proposals from
Art-Anthropology (eg. Ingold and Hallam
2007; also Schneider 2017).
In this line, art understood as creative
process allow us to focus on a difference:
while techno-science present a propositional
approach to the world, based on the search
of truth, specular artifacts, and final results,
art provides a non-propositional, practical
and growing knowledge. It does not need to
be explained and depend more on experien-
ce and perception than to schemes of
description.
The relation between art and archaeology in
practice has been common as exemplify “Le
dejeuner sous l’herbe” (1983) by the French
artist Daniel Spoerri and the French
archaeologist Jean-Paul Demoulé, among
other examples, especially from British
artists like Mark Dion with his “Tate
Thames Dig” (1999-2000). In addition, we
can find examples all over the world like the
Art&Archaeology Forum in Kyoto, Japan,
where artists are invited to collaborate with
archaeologists. More archaeo-artistic coin-
cidences could be found in the archaeologi-
cal fieldwork in the Monte Miravete site at
Murcia (Spain), done by a strong Art-Ar-
chaeology approach. My personal experien-
ce involves also our work in the Archaeo-
drome, a fake archaeological site of 5x5
meters square where we do artistic and
archaeological practices (figure 1).
In this place, I identified several processes
about collection, fragmentation and earthing
(opposed to excavation) in the ongoing
process of the creation of the entire site that
involved performance and aesthetics,
memories and improvisation. This was
conceptualized in my artwork “Archaeolo-
gical Contra-Museum” presented at Sighta-
tions exhibition at Southampton, UK (TAG
meeting 2016).
More examples around aesthetics are the
works of the Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei, who
use elements of the Chinese Heritage to
create pieces through destroying real
archaeological artifacts as Neolithic urns
from the Han period (“Han dynasty urn”
(1995), “Han Dynasty urn with Coca-cola
logo” (1994)). Other artists working on field
are Arman with his ‘packed’ rubbish-art;
Simon Fujiwara with his works “Phallusies”
(2010) and “Frozen’s” (2010); Daniel
Guzman and his artwork about the presence
of the archaeological in the daily life throu-
gh his piece “La dificultad de cruzar un
campo de tierra cualquiera” (2012); and also
great painters like Picasso who used prehis-
toric art as inspiration. We could find many
artists like Dragos Georghiu or Richard
Long in Land art, and interesting proposals
in Conceptual art, such Duchamp itself, and
his understanding of art as materialization of
ideas. One of my favorite art style is Street
art because involves the creation of new
sites through changing the meanings of the
public space. The creation of art is an
archaeological evidence itself, because the
artwork always would represent the artist's
agency (according to art anthropologist
Alfred Gell, in Layton 2003:450). I do not
think so -art would be archaeological due to
common creative processes, not because
superimposed abstractions, as agency, to
final incomes to be seen.
About photography and ethnography
To avoid ocularcentrism in this visual enter-
prise, I decided to manage a direct observa-
tion and participation on the field, and then
recorded with ethnographic methods. Some
authors in archaeological ethnography have
pointed out that archaeological knowledge
is not only built with social organization and
hierarchies (eg. Edgeworth 2006), but is
discovered in the practice where natural raw
materials are transformed into cultural infor-
mation (Edgeworth 2003). As I explained
above, I think instead that knowledge emer-
ges in the practice. My interest to include
senses to ethnography then led me to
photo-ethnography (Moreno 2013), and to
the work of Hamilakis and Infantidis (2016)
in Kalaureia (Poros, Greece) which I use as
inspiration for my own photo-ethnography
at Monte Miravete site (Murcia, Spain)
(Marmol 2016, incoming). This kind of
approach combines anthropology, archaeo-
logy and art.
It make contrast with the techno-quantitati-
ve methods popular in current archaeologi-
cal research. Like a secret path in the hege-
mony of the visual, it is a form of auto-eth-
nography where reflexivity is opposed to
traditional distances of the research like the
Others context, observations, interviews,
narratives, and so on. It turns its interests to
all subjects and contexts of research. These
elements not depends of the skills of a
photographer or videographer, because they
have value anyhow -it moves between the
academic and the artistic (Moreno 2013).
The mainstream conception is that the
intemporality of photography, the photogra-
phs as immutable mobile artifacts (Van
Dyke 2006) would make them good tools
for support the processes of social analysis
(Moreno 2013). However, photography is
not independent. If we understand them as
cultural artifacts, they are more than a repre-
sentation of reality. We find in them discour-
ses that imposes its own regimes of signifi-
cation, requiring a context of interpretation
to understand its meanings. To going deep
into them is to discover social relationships
of production, consume, power, knowledge,
etc., modern relations that confirms our
distance from the reality seen. In ocularcen-
tric terms, to photograph is a social action
and not only a merely technic achievement
(Moreno 2013). Its truth, to follow a Fou-
cauldian concept, is an effect of power. Once
decoded its contents, the pic can become an
artifact full of symbolic potential (Moreno
2013), almost a thing that could be object of
archaeological analysis, like the pics of
Syrian refugee’s materiality at Lesbos
(Greece) done by the journalist Santi Pala-
cios.
In photo-ethnography, the pic is not only a
passive artifact for illustration of acts but
also allows visualizing concepts and facts
to which understand environments, bodily
dispositions and relational interactions (Mo-
reno 2013). The visual sources used for this
kind of ethnography may be selected from
unintentional records like selfies, scientific
photographies of materials, pics from the
excavation, newspaper or even papers and
meetings. Through photography, it is possi-
ble to capture these details of daily life to be
analyzed, and to incorporate the “native
voice” of the people represented in its inter-
pretation (Moreno 2013:128). Here the
visually of the artifact go further than textual
incomes such descriptions, since provokes
the emergence of free expression, sensibili-
ties produced at the moment of the shoot,
and to “think with eyes and hands” (Ruiz
Zapatero 2014:65. Translation mine). In the
moment of the shoot, the materiality of the
camera, the hands, the eyes, the knowledge
and the intentions of the author, and the
always changing material world to be captu-
red are corresponding to each other, making
possible the moment of photography in the
conjunction of all of them. Independently of
the result, this process implies a great capa-
city of improvisation that makes the photo-
graph an incidental income of the ethnogra-
phic process.
In archaeological photography, we add
another element of signification, the
memory (Ruiz Zapatero 2014:56). Inside
every photograph, there are several tempo-
ralities, making memory a guiding exercise
to be made. However, its intention of 'truth'
hides its potential and free signification, as
happens with the struggle between needless-
ly to be explained art, and scientific obliga-
tory explanation.
It is common to think there is a ‘strategy of
representation’ that constitutes under inten-
tional agendas what is represented (Ruiz
2014; Van Dyke 2006). This heterogeneous
understanding needs an sceptic attitude
which start with doubting about the photo-
graphic veracity itself: considering Karl
Heiders concept 'Rashômon effect' (Heider
1988) we are aware of the several interpreta-
tions, equally rightful, that archaeologists
have, which are in conflict with the ones of
others. There is not a unique truth even in
the simplest processes like photography.
The photograph have an evocative power
articulating stories and connecting different
memories, sometimes about a moment that
does not already exist (Shanks and Svabo
2013; Ruiz 2014). They connects the unreal
with the real, recreating new experiences
providing new meanings (Webmoor 2005).
Then the world appears as an entity that can
be captured, paused a divided into stable
temporal periods (Bergson 1963). The pic
requires the use of an archaeological imagi-
nation (eg. Shanks 2012), more sensual than
textual. Photographs are itself a mystery that
the viewer has to decode, making emerge
inspirational sensations and close relations
between time and space, bodies and
artifacts.
Under specular terms, the object of study is
approached from the aesthetic, in the limits
of a mainstream analysis, which along
objectification, institutionalization and
legitimation establish such conditions for
the analysis of collective production of
knowledge (Moreno 2013).
What photo-ethnography proposes is to
transcend the artificial limitations of our
subjects of study through sensibilities, with
the addition of other corporal, sensual
elements and kinetics that participate in the
flowing of the reality that has been 'captu-
red'. Symbols, signs, attitudes, gestures, and
footprints, from all these the photo-ethno-
grapher obtain new perspectives about
signification (Moreno 2013). Why just sepa-
rate all this experience in little parts to fit
them into strictly processes of classifica-
tion? The visual essay I propose plays with
irony when identify textual symbols, dots,
over the material world. Instead of start from
pre-stablished texts, texts are being created
through the visual interpretation of inexis-
tent textual symbols.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
26
In the context of the material turn, the
distance between abstract theory and physi-
cal world is more narrow day per day (Gon-
zález-Ruibal 2012). In this interstice, art for
theory has reach our discipline bringing new
ways to understand materiality.
It is clear that the techniques and thoughts of
artists has been used to do science along the
time, as we can see in the work of Leonardo
or in the notion of science as “art of…”, of
the Renaissance. Our categories to organize
reality comes from these times in which
descriptions were made by the use of
drawings (Renfrew 2003).
This is also clear in the first’s ethnographies
done by the Spanish priests in the communi-
ties they contacted with, through methods
based on drawings with the aim to give faith
about what they saw. Now, art historians
analyze many of these depictions. The same
situation happens when we talk about
archaeological drawings if we understand
them just as visual artifacts. Further reflec-
tions arises through Joseph Kosuth's “One
and three Chairs” (1965) where a reflection
about issues of veracity, representation,
textuality and ontology could be made.
A critical attitude towards archaeology ask
for question taken for granted assumptions.
These kind of reflections has been made in
recent years in the works about critical
theory (eg. Fernández 2006), and by alterna-
tive understandings of knowledge, like
senses studies (eg. Hamilakis 2014; Simone-
tti 2013; Ingold 2013), the peripatetic video
(Weebmor 2005; Witmore 2006; also Van
Dyke 2006), or sounds (Witmore 2004), etc.
Other works put their focus on the limita-
tions of methodology, through archaeologi-
cal ethnography (eg. Hamilakis, Pluciennik,
and Tarlow 2001; Hamilakis and Anag-
nostopoulos 2009; Hamilakis, Anagnosto-
poulos and Ifantidis 2009; Edgeworth 2010,
2006, 2003; Castañeda and Matthews 2008;
among others). In line with these alternative
understandings of the practice, we find
themes mixing art and archaeology (eg.
Tilley, Hamilton, and Bender 2000; Shanks
and Pearson 2001; Shanks 2004, 2012;
Valdez-Tullet and Chittock 2016; Cochrane
and Russell 2013; Georghiu and Barth 2018,
incoming; Marmol 2017, among others). As
we saw above, this last theme could be
re-defined far from the prevalence of final
incomes, especially with proposals from
Art-Anthropology (eg. Ingold and Hallam
2007; also Schneider 2017).
In this line, art understood as creative
process allow us to focus on a difference:
while techno-science present a propositional
approach to the world, based on the search
of truth, specular artifacts, and final results,
art provides a non-propositional, practical
and growing knowledge. It does not need to
be explained and depend more on experien-
ce and perception than to schemes of
description.
The relation between art and archaeology in
practice has been common as exemplify “Le
dejeuner sous l’herbe” (1983) by the French
artist Daniel Spoerri and the French
archaeologist Jean-Paul Demoulé, among
other examples, especially from British
artists like Mark Dion with his “Tate
Thames Dig” (1999-2000). In addition, we
can find examples all over the world like the
Art&Archaeology Forum in Kyoto, Japan,
where artists are invited to collaborate with
archaeologists. More archaeo-artistic coin-
cidences could be found in the archaeologi-
cal fieldwork in the Monte Miravete site at
Murcia (Spain), done by a strong Art-Ar-
chaeology approach. My personal experien-
ce involves also our work in the Archaeo-
drome, a fake archaeological site of 5x5
meters square where we do artistic and
archaeological practices (figure 1).
In this place, I identified several processes
about collection, fragmentation and earthing
(opposed to excavation) in the ongoing
process of the creation of the entire site that
involved performance and aesthetics,
memories and improvisation. This was
conceptualized in my artwork “Archaeolo-
gical Contra-Museum” presented at Sighta-
tions exhibition at Southampton, UK (TAG
meeting 2016).
More examples around aesthetics are the
works of the Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei, who
use elements of the Chinese Heritage to
create pieces through destroying real
archaeological artifacts as Neolithic urns
from the Han period (“Han dynasty urn”
(1995), “Han Dynasty urn with Coca-cola
logo” (1994)). Other artists working on field
are Arman with his ‘packed’ rubbish-art;
Simon Fujiwara with his works “Phallusies”
(2010) and “Frozen’s” (2010); Daniel
Guzman and his artwork about the presence
of the archaeological in the daily life throu-
gh his piece “La dificultad de cruzar un
campo de tierra cualquiera” (2012); and also
great painters like Picasso who used prehis-
toric art as inspiration. We could find many
artists like Dragos Georghiu or Richard
Long in Land art, and interesting proposals
in Conceptual art, such Duchamp itself, and
his understanding of art as materialization of
ideas. One of my favorite art style is Street
art because involves the creation of new
sites through changing the meanings of the
public space. The creation of art is an
archaeological evidence itself, because the
artwork always would represent the artist's
agency (according to art anthropologist
Alfred Gell, in Layton 2003:450). I do not
think so -art would be archaeological due to
common creative processes, not because
superimposed abstractions, as agency, to
final incomes to be seen.
About photography and ethnography
To avoid ocularcentrism in this visual enter-
prise, I decided to manage a direct observa-
tion and participation on the field, and then
recorded with ethnographic methods. Some
authors in archaeological ethnography have
pointed out that archaeological knowledge
is not only built with social organization and
hierarchies (eg. Edgeworth 2006), but is
discovered in the practice where natural raw
materials are transformed into cultural infor-
mation (Edgeworth 2003). As I explained
above, I think instead that knowledge emer-
ges in the practice. My interest to include
senses to ethnography then led me to
photo-ethnography (Moreno 2013), and to
the work of Hamilakis and Infantidis (2016)
in Kalaureia (Poros, Greece) which I use as
inspiration for my own photo-ethnography
at Monte Miravete site (Murcia, Spain)
(Marmol 2016, incoming). This kind of
approach combines anthropology, archaeo-
logy and art.
It make contrast with the techno-quantitati-
ve methods popular in current archaeologi-
cal research. Like a secret path in the hege-
mony of the visual, it is a form of auto-eth-
nography where reflexivity is opposed to
traditional distances of the research like the
Others context, observations, interviews,
narratives, and so on. It turns its interests to
all subjects and contexts of research. These
elements not depends of the skills of a
photographer or videographer, because they
have value anyhow -it moves between the
academic and the artistic (Moreno 2013).
The mainstream conception is that the
intemporality of photography, the photogra-
phs as immutable mobile artifacts (Van
Dyke 2006) would make them good tools
for support the processes of social analysis
(Moreno 2013). However, photography is
not independent. If we understand them as
cultural artifacts, they are more than a repre-
sentation of reality. We find in them discour-
ses that imposes its own regimes of signifi-
cation, requiring a context of interpretation
to understand its meanings. To going deep
into them is to discover social relationships
of production, consume, power, knowledge,
etc., modern relations that confirms our
distance from the reality seen. In ocularcen-
tric terms, to photograph is a social action
and not only a merely technic achievement
(Moreno 2013). Its truth, to follow a Fou-
cauldian concept, is an effect of power. Once
decoded its contents, the pic can become an
artifact full of symbolic potential (Moreno
2013), almost a thing that could be object of
archaeological analysis, like the pics of
Syrian refugee’s materiality at Lesbos
(Greece) done by the journalist Santi Pala-
cios.
In photo-ethnography, the pic is not only a
passive artifact for illustration of acts but
also allows visualizing concepts and facts
to which understand environments, bodily
dispositions and relational interactions (Mo-
reno 2013). The visual sources used for this
kind of ethnography may be selected from
unintentional records like selfies, scientific
photographies of materials, pics from the
excavation, newspaper or even papers and
meetings. Through photography, it is possi-
ble to capture these details of daily life to be
analyzed, and to incorporate the “native
voice” of the people represented in its inter-
pretation (Moreno 2013:128). Here the
visually of the artifact go further than textual
incomes such descriptions, since provokes
the emergence of free expression, sensibili-
ties produced at the moment of the shoot,
and to “think with eyes and hands” (Ruiz
Zapatero 2014:65. Translation mine). In the
moment of the shoot, the materiality of the
camera, the hands, the eyes, the knowledge
and the intentions of the author, and the
always changing material world to be captu-
red are corresponding to each other, making
possible the moment of photography in the
conjunction of all of them. Independently of
the result, this process implies a great capa-
city of improvisation that makes the photo-
graph an incidental income of the ethnogra-
phic process.
In archaeological photography, we add
another element of signification, the
memory (Ruiz Zapatero 2014:56). Inside
every photograph, there are several tempo-
ralities, making memory a guiding exercise
to be made. However, its intention of 'truth'
hides its potential and free signification, as
happens with the struggle between needless-
ly to be explained art, and scientific obliga-
tory explanation.
It is common to think there is a ‘strategy of
representation’ that constitutes under inten-
tional agendas what is represented (Ruiz
2014; Van Dyke 2006). This heterogeneous
understanding needs an sceptic attitude
which start with doubting about the photo-
graphic veracity itself: considering Karl
Heiders concept 'Rashômon effect' (Heider
1988) we are aware of the several interpreta-
tions, equally rightful, that archaeologists
have, which are in conflict with the ones of
others. There is not a unique truth even in
the simplest processes like photography.
The photograph have an evocative power
articulating stories and connecting different
memories, sometimes about a moment that
does not already exist (Shanks and Svabo
2013; Ruiz 2014). They connects the unreal
with the real, recreating new experiences
providing new meanings (Webmoor 2005).
Then the world appears as an entity that can
be captured, paused a divided into stable
temporal periods (Bergson 1963). The pic
requires the use of an archaeological imagi-
nation (eg. Shanks 2012), more sensual than
textual. Photographs are itself a mystery that
the viewer has to decode, making emerge
inspirational sensations and close relations
between time and space, bodies and
artifacts.
Under specular terms, the object of study is
approached from the aesthetic, in the limits
of a mainstream analysis, which along
objectification, institutionalization and
legitimation establish such conditions for
the analysis of collective production of
knowledge (Moreno 2013).
What photo-ethnography proposes is to
transcend the artificial limitations of our
subjects of study through sensibilities, with
the addition of other corporal, sensual
elements and kinetics that participate in the
flowing of the reality that has been 'captu-
red'. Symbols, signs, attitudes, gestures, and
footprints, from all these the photo-ethno-
grapher obtain new perspectives about
signification (Moreno 2013). Why just sepa-
rate all this experience in little parts to fit
them into strictly processes of classifica-
tion? The visual essay I propose plays with
irony when identify textual symbols, dots,
over the material world. Instead of start from
pre-stablished texts, texts are being created
through the visual interpretation of inexis-
tent textual symbols.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
27
In the context of the material turn, the
distance between abstract theory and physi-
cal world is more narrow day per day (Gon-
zález-Ruibal 2012). In this interstice, art for
theory has reach our discipline bringing new
ways to understand materiality.
It is clear that the techniques and thoughts of
artists has been used to do science along the
time, as we can see in the work of Leonardo
or in the notion of science as “art of…”, of
the Renaissance. Our categories to organize
reality comes from these times in which
descriptions were made by the use of
drawings (Renfrew 2003).
This is also clear in the first’s ethnographies
done by the Spanish priests in the communi-
ties they contacted with, through methods
based on drawings with the aim to give faith
about what they saw. Now, art historians
analyze many of these depictions. The same
situation happens when we talk about
archaeological drawings if we understand
them just as visual artifacts. Further reflec-
tions arises through Joseph Kosuth's “One
and three Chairs” (1965) where a reflection
about issues of veracity, representation,
textuality and ontology could be made.
A critical attitude towards archaeology ask
for question taken for granted assumptions.
These kind of reflections has been made in
recent years in the works about critical
theory (eg. Fernández 2006), and by alterna-
tive understandings of knowledge, like
senses studies (eg. Hamilakis 2014; Simone-
tti 2013; Ingold 2013), the peripatetic video
(Weebmor 2005; Witmore 2006; also Van
Dyke 2006), or sounds (Witmore 2004), etc.
Other works put their focus on the limita-
tions of methodology, through archaeologi-
cal ethnography (eg. Hamilakis, Pluciennik,
and Tarlow 2001; Hamilakis and Anag-
nostopoulos 2009; Hamilakis, Anagnosto-
poulos and Ifantidis 2009; Edgeworth 2010,
2006, 2003; Castañeda and Matthews 2008;
among others). In line with these alternative
understandings of the practice, we find
themes mixing art and archaeology (eg.
Tilley, Hamilton, and Bender 2000; Shanks
and Pearson 2001; Shanks 2004, 2012;
Valdez-Tullet and Chittock 2016; Cochrane
and Russell 2013; Georghiu and Barth 2018,
incoming; Marmol 2017, among others). As
we saw above, this last theme could be
re-defined far from the prevalence of final
incomes, especially with proposals from
Art-Anthropology (eg. Ingold and Hallam
2007; also Schneider 2017).
In this line, art understood as creative
process allow us to focus on a difference:
while techno-science present a propositional
approach to the world, based on the search
of truth, specular artifacts, and final results,
art provides a non-propositional, practical
and growing knowledge. It does not need to
be explained and depend more on experien-
ce and perception than to schemes of
description.
The relation between art and archaeology in
practice has been common as exemplify “Le
dejeuner sous l’herbe” (1983) by the French
artist Daniel Spoerri and the French
archaeologist Jean-Paul Demoulé, among
other examples, especially from British
artists like Mark Dion with his “Tate
Thames Dig” (1999-2000). In addition, we
can find examples all over the world like the
Art&Archaeology Forum in Kyoto, Japan,
where artists are invited to collaborate with
archaeologists. More archaeo-artistic coin-
cidences could be found in the archaeologi-
cal fieldwork in the Monte Miravete site at
Murcia (Spain), done by a strong Art-Ar-
chaeology approach. My personal experien-
ce involves also our work in the Archaeo-
drome, a fake archaeological site of 5x5
meters square where we do artistic and
archaeological practices (figure 1).
In this place, I identified several processes
about collection, fragmentation and earthing
(opposed to excavation) in the ongoing
process of the creation of the entire site that
involved performance and aesthetics,
memories and improvisation. This was
conceptualized in my artwork “Archaeolo-
gical Contra-Museum” presented at Sighta-
tions exhibition at Southampton, UK (TAG
meeting 2016).
More examples around aesthetics are the
works of the Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei, who
use elements of the Chinese Heritage to
create pieces through destroying real
archaeological artifacts as Neolithic urns
from the Han period (“Han dynasty urn”
(1995), “Han Dynasty urn with Coca-cola
logo” (1994)). Other artists working on field
are Arman with his ‘packed’ rubbish-art;
Simon Fujiwara with his works “Phallusies”
(2010) and “Frozen’s” (2010); Daniel
Guzman and his artwork about the presence
of the archaeological in the daily life throu-
gh his piece “La dificultad de cruzar un
campo de tierra cualquiera” (2012); and also
great painters like Picasso who used prehis-
toric art as inspiration. We could find many
artists like Dragos Georghiu or Richard
Long in Land art, and interesting proposals
in Conceptual art, such Duchamp itself, and
his understanding of art as materialization of
ideas. One of my favorite art style is Street
art because involves the creation of new
sites through changing the meanings of the
public space. The creation of art is an
archaeological evidence itself, because the
artwork always would represent the artist's
agency (according to art anthropologist
Alfred Gell, in Layton 2003:450). I do not
think so -art would be archaeological due to
common creative processes, not because
superimposed abstractions, as agency, to
final incomes to be seen.
About photography and ethnography
To avoid ocularcentrism in this visual enter-
prise, I decided to manage a direct observa-
tion and participation on the field, and then
recorded with ethnographic methods. Some
authors in archaeological ethnography have
pointed out that archaeological knowledge
is not only built with social organization and
hierarchies (eg. Edgeworth 2006), but is
discovered in the practice where natural raw
materials are transformed into cultural infor-
mation (Edgeworth 2003). As I explained
above, I think instead that knowledge emer-
ges in the practice. My interest to include
senses to ethnography then led me to
photo-ethnography (Moreno 2013), and to
the work of Hamilakis and Infantidis (2016)
in Kalaureia (Poros, Greece) which I use as
inspiration for my own photo-ethnography
at Monte Miravete site (Murcia, Spain)
(Marmol 2016, incoming). This kind of
approach combines anthropology, archaeo-
logy and art.
It make contrast with the techno-quantitati-
ve methods popular in current archaeologi-
cal research. Like a secret path in the hege-
mony of the visual, it is a form of auto-eth-
nography where reflexivity is opposed to
traditional distances of the research like the
Others context, observations, interviews,
narratives, and so on. It turns its interests to
all subjects and contexts of research. These
elements not depends of the skills of a
photographer or videographer, because they
have value anyhow -it moves between the
academic and the artistic (Moreno 2013).
The mainstream conception is that the
intemporality of photography, the photogra-
phs as immutable mobile artifacts (Van
Dyke 2006) would make them good tools
for support the processes of social analysis
(Moreno 2013). However, photography is
not independent. If we understand them as
cultural artifacts, they are more than a repre-
sentation of reality. We find in them discour-
ses that imposes its own regimes of signifi-
cation, requiring a context of interpretation
to understand its meanings. To going deep
into them is to discover social relationships
of production, consume, power, knowledge,
etc., modern relations that confirms our
distance from the reality seen. In ocularcen-
tric terms, to photograph is a social action
and not only a merely technic achievement
(Moreno 2013). Its truth, to follow a Fou-
cauldian concept, is an effect of power. Once
decoded its contents, the pic can become an
artifact full of symbolic potential (Moreno
2013), almost a thing that could be object of
archaeological analysis, like the pics of
Syrian refugee’s materiality at Lesbos
(Greece) done by the journalist Santi Pala-
cios.
In photo-ethnography, the pic is not only a
passive artifact for illustration of acts but
also allows visualizing concepts and facts
to which understand environments, bodily
dispositions and relational interactions (Mo-
reno 2013). The visual sources used for this
kind of ethnography may be selected from
unintentional records like selfies, scientific
photographies of materials, pics from the
excavation, newspaper or even papers and
meetings. Through photography, it is possi-
ble to capture these details of daily life to be
analyzed, and to incorporate the “native
voice” of the people represented in its inter-
pretation (Moreno 2013:128). Here the
visually of the artifact go further than textual
incomes such descriptions, since provokes
the emergence of free expression, sensibili-
ties produced at the moment of the shoot,
and to “think with eyes and hands” (Ruiz
Zapatero 2014:65. Translation mine). In the
moment of the shoot, the materiality of the
camera, the hands, the eyes, the knowledge
and the intentions of the author, and the
always changing material world to be captu-
red are corresponding to each other, making
possible the moment of photography in the
conjunction of all of them. Independently of
the result, this process implies a great capa-
city of improvisation that makes the photo-
graph an incidental income of the ethnogra-
phic process.
In archaeological photography, we add
another element of signification, the
memory (Ruiz Zapatero 2014:56). Inside
every photograph, there are several tempo-
ralities, making memory a guiding exercise
to be made. However, its intention of 'truth'
hides its potential and free signification, as
happens with the struggle between needless-
ly to be explained art, and scientific obliga-
tory explanation.
It is common to think there is a ‘strategy of
representation’ that constitutes under inten-
tional agendas what is represented (Ruiz
2014; Van Dyke 2006). This heterogeneous
understanding needs an sceptic attitude
which start with doubting about the photo-
graphic veracity itself: considering Karl
Heiders concept 'Rashômon effect' (Heider
1988) we are aware of the several interpreta-
tions, equally rightful, that archaeologists
have, which are in conflict with the ones of
others. There is not a unique truth even in
the simplest processes like photography.
The photograph have an evocative power
articulating stories and connecting different
memories, sometimes about a moment that
does not already exist (Shanks and Svabo
2013; Ruiz 2014). They connects the unreal
with the real, recreating new experiences
providing new meanings (Webmoor 2005).
Then the world appears as an entity that can
be captured, paused a divided into stable
temporal periods (Bergson 1963). The pic
requires the use of an archaeological imagi-
nation (eg. Shanks 2012), more sensual than
textual. Photographs are itself a mystery that
the viewer has to decode, making emerge
inspirational sensations and close relations
between time and space, bodies and
artifacts.
Under specular terms, the object of study is
approached from the aesthetic, in the limits
of a mainstream analysis, which along
objectification, institutionalization and
legitimation establish such conditions for
the analysis of collective production of
knowledge (Moreno 2013).
What photo-ethnography proposes is to
transcend the artificial limitations of our
subjects of study through sensibilities, with
the addition of other corporal, sensual
elements and kinetics that participate in the
flowing of the reality that has been 'captu-
red'. Symbols, signs, attitudes, gestures, and
footprints, from all these the photo-ethno-
grapher obtain new perspectives about
signification (Moreno 2013). Why just sepa-
rate all this experience in little parts to fit
them into strictly processes of classifica-
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
DISCUSSION:
THE ONTOLOGY OF THE DOT
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
28
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
29
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
30
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
31
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
32
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
33
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
34
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
35
What is a dot?
According to the common definition, we
could find in any dictionary a dot is a “small
signal which is perceived due to its (color)
contrast with the surface, commonly repre-
sented as circular” and as “grammatical
signal which indicates the end of a sentence
or a pause in a wider text much more than
any other grammatical sign” (note that in
Spanish, the word ‘punto’ means both ‘dot’
and ‘point’. These definitions have been
taken from the Spanish language Academy
dictionary www.rae.es). This is similar to
the concept we imagine at the time to read
the word ‘dot’. However, what is actually a
point, a dot? If visual element perceived by
contrast with his background, are also dots
all the elements that contrast with a back-
ground? Indeed, to identify something by
contrast is the basis of perception.
In Spanish language, dot and point have the
same meaning. A point could be several
things depends of the discipline. We can use
points for measure; to refer to the minimum
contact with a surface; are also a geometric
form; a concept of limits like in Maths; as
indicator of a point; a grammatical sign; an
indicator of temperature; use it when one
status change to another; as anatomy indica-
tor (cardinal points), etc. In Latin, a point
(punctum) is any hole done by drawing. It
represent something that has ended or what
are going to start. Also something which
serve to rest, a pause, the end and the begin,
anger, quantitative valuation, bodies in the
space.
In all this senses of the use of a point (dot),
we see two main characteristics: 1-it index
or represent the objectification of a real
phenomenon (eg. measurable properties),
and 2-it is the transmutation from one status
to another. These two possible meanings are
fluctuating between passivity and activity,
pause and speed.
In this artwork, I will try to show this objec-
tification and transmutation using the
concept of ‘dot’ applied to several archaeo-
logical contexts. Following this, I have
found the point, the dot as a movement and
as materiality as well. Like an act of ethno-
graphic documentation and as an artistic
indetermination where a point is something
theoretic, imagined, observable, to face it
out.
To distill the world in such a manner to be
able to fit the phenomena into mainstream
categories of classification, it is common the
use of points. This use means to push one
status into another, like reflecting vests
making visible new subjects in the landsca-
pe. The point is the sensitive beginning that
attracts our attention.
Beyond the grammaticalness, we find the
dot as a universal key to understand materia-
lity like stone structures or pottery sherds
emerging during excavation (indeed the
finds are perceived as goals, that is, to
follow a grammatical relation, to consider
them as points too). Therefore, the remains
are points of attention and can be connected
with other kinds of different-nature points,
like if we were surrealists sailing in a sea of
alternative realities. The dot could be passi-
ve but also performative indicator of the
creative acts performed by archaeologists.
Here the dot is not a textual symbol just in
its very meaning; ontologically (if we accept
the ontology of a dot); it is diverse and hete-
rogeneous, in unexpected ways. If the dot
have a very nature, it would be possible
because there are something material on it,
something that should be independent from
us, with a life-story. If not, we are talking of
dot typologies, artificial, textual features
imagined over materials -then observed
features that fit into pre-stablished catego-
ries of analysis.
So, said that long explanation of the theory
that informs my position, let me present the
artwork finally. In this photo-essay, you can
observe the pairs of pics accompanied with a
short explanation of the dot identified in
each case.
• Dot as minimal contact with a surface: this
pair of photographs comes from a moment
during the excavation of the Archaeodrome
simulated site. Here the dot could be identi-
fied due to its role as articulator of interac-
tions between the body, the trench and the
white threads used to delimit the squares to
be excavated -two epistemological worlds
that contact one to each other in the same
fluid world. The white threads, parts cut
from the same thread, are also contacting
one to each other, creating a dot at the cross
point, as dot as minimal contact with a surfa-
ce (figure 2).
• Dot as point: this pair shows the nails used
to keep the threads of the trench. These two
points are markers in the landscape of the
site, and requires a careful attention to not to
move them. Even several forces (hits with a
hammer, stones, and nails pressure) would
be mobilized to make them stable points.
Once the trench has been excavated, these
nails are keep as axis of the internal order of
the practice. Also they marks the boundaries
of the site and represent a physical path in
which significant elements are exported and
imported to inform the next steps of the
excavation. As almost the unique fixed point
in a fluid practice, all depends of its mainte-
nance. After the excavation, the little holes
left by them, in case to being removed, will
be there as much as the earth of the site in
the iron surface of the nail (figure 2).
• Dot as numbers: these couple of pairs
shows the diary of the survey at Monte
Miravete site, in which the team had written
the coordinates of the structures found on
the site. Every sequence of numbers repre-
sent a point inside the space in where there
are an archaeological remain, but also these
sequences are points inside the context of
the paper. Even we represented them as
black points with names and numbers in a
digital map. This record means to incorpora-
te conceptual information both in the practi-
ce of survey and in next visits, articulating
with maps and points further engagements
with the landscape (figure 3).
• Dot as representation: the archaeological
drawing is made by the contact of the pencil
in a paper surface. The dots used to repre-
sent volumes and irregularities of the
archaeological artifacts serves not only to
make a testimony of veracity of what has
been recover, but also allows to conceptuali-
ze the materials for the study of its proper-
ties. However, this study is only logic inside
the rules of the method, otherwise the draw
would be an unreal representation made by
the interaction of the pencil, the ink, the
paper, the hand and the intentions of the
author. If the draw contains enough veracity,
it is because the conceptualization of the
materials recovered: they are like points in
the context of the research that are transfor-
med into a thousand of points in the draw.
This exercise follows a direction of disgre-
gation, the disappearance of materiality into
its technological representation. The ontolo-
gy of the materials is seen analogue to the
artificiality of the dots, clearly separated
from the field but incorporated in further
practices (figure 3).
• Dot as form: summer. We are surveying an
18km² site in which we found this circu-
lar-shape structures, kilns of the 19th
century. These structures seems to be dot-li-
ke, circular points. In addition, there are
other kinds of dots since we can represent
them in maps, using points as have seen
above. We can draw those structures using
points, and even the record sheets shows two
points more: the draft plant and the textual
description. Since structures have made its
own paths in coordination with the rest of
the elements of landscape, those paths we
involuntarily followed in the survey, the
structures are also articulators of some parti-
cular phenomena in which the movements
of the archaeologists are included (figure 4).
• Dot as diacritic symbol: in the architecture
of photograph, relevant elements like mate-
rials found are perceived as points among
the rest of elements seen. These elements are
points of attention, these that makes the
image 'archaeological-like'. In this sense,
tools like the trowel are also points in the
photograph, defining the pic as a meta-re-
presentation of the archaeological practice.
In visual terms, they refer to a world outside
the available information in the image (figu-
re 5).
• Dot as physical change: from the soil, the
finds emerge through the actions of volun-
teers. As a find, this little lamp is a point in
the context of the entire research. However,
this material, composed by a reunion of clay,
paint and maker's hands, also have a history
of life, which is hidden for the volunteers. It
was made by us, prior to its earthing in the
site. Nevertheless, independently of this
fact, to be corroborated has to be presented
through photographs under the terms of the
archaeological documentation. From clay
-materially- to a namely category -medieval
lamp- this remain is conceived at the distan-
ce as a point, contrasting with the ground,
and with several temporalities (figure 5).
• Dot as anatomy: maps represent several
geographical features. Since what are repre-
sented is the relevant elements for the
research, and the research is conducted by
human aspirations guided by materiality, the
map would incorporate a sensual geography
of landscape. Not just geographical informa-
tion, but also paths, remains, special places
to be remembered. The points of the maps
are not only passive representation of visited
places, but also a projection of memories
and possible possibilities for future. This
kind of points could be also iconic represen-
tations showing how the corporal move-
ments in the space (figure 6) are.
• Dot as performance: there are no much
conserved examples of ancient, prehistoric
tattoo. Some of these few examples seems to
be enough information for create a discourse
about the Pazyryk culture (Argent 2013).
The analysis of relationships between repre-
sentations and cultural aesthetic schemes
has been common. The performative act of
tattoo, the incorporation of real beliefs and
aspirations through hand movements into
the skin with inked sticks, reminds the crea-
tion of documents over which we hope to
continue the research. To tattoo implies the
explicit insertion of thousand dots into the
skin (figure 6).
• Dot as grammatical symbol: it is common
to think that archaeological information is
complete when it is published. Then all the
experiences, processes, engagements and
contacts with materials are summarized and
selected, written in few pages. Those pages
are white surfaces in which black ink is
deposited, creating forms that represent
signs. It usually happens with the act of
typing on a computer. As Ingold pointed out,
typing is the example of how modern human
beings are losing their humanity, since we
only use the fingertips in our interaction
with the material world (2013). In the text
itself, we also use signs. Moreover, some of
these takes the form of pics, figures and
quotes, points referring to other realities
among seas of words. Here the dot act for
understand the text, to have an experience of
reading based on little stops and ongoing
reading. Then it is a performative act ruled
by this symbolism, also physically present
with a mount of ink in the form of a dot
(figure 7). The dot is always out there, in
daily experience, making us to stop and
breathe.
• Dot as bodily experience: our bodies are
part of the landscape of the research. On
fieldwork, archaeologists with reflecting
vests are material points in this landscape.
However, for foreigners and for the ethno-
grapher, they are part also of the wider natu-
ral environment. Being points, their engage-
ment with the field happens through artifi-
cial understanding of nature (figure 8).
• Dot as concept: this pic shows the record
sheets to document the archaeological
findings. These sheets are analogue to the
camera, in the sense they works in the same
way instrumentalizing real phenomena. The
conceptualization of the stone structures is
done first with a textual description of its
main characteristics, then with a draft
drawing through which measures, locations,
coordinates, and are recorded. This is the
creation of points from points to make more
points in the maps and publications
(figure 9).
• Dot as geometry: here the dot is evident.
The circular-shape of this fragment of
pottery reminds us that the idea of materiali-
ty recognizable from geometry to be
contemplated is profoundly ocularcentric.
This fragment was a point in the fieldwork,
now is a point in the database since it is one
of the significant pieces of the research
(figure 9).
• Dot as artistic income: archaeological life
brought me to Santander (north Spain) to
attend a meeting. I visited Covalanas Cave,
in where there are a stunning Prehistoric
rock art, representations of deers made by
dots. I tried to reproduce how these could
had be done drawing points, as I did with
tattoo above. The dot as art is just a retros-
pective category to name a creative process
we unknown (figure 10).
. Dot as unit of measure: one of the common
uses for a point is to measure things, to make
accounts. In this sense, archaeology uses
measure tools and points of reference.
Doing so, what we see can be understood.
The points constitutes a basis for the horizon
of possibilities, articulated around aesthetics
of archaeology and the narrative of bring the
Past in the Present.
The stone wall is not neither natural nor
cultural; never left to be material. It is signi-
ficant just in the reign of modern rationality,
while became part of the life story of lands-
cape since ever (figure 10).
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
36
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
37
we are living, non quantifiable goods sounds
useless. Specially high technology has been
conceived as exclusive mediator with the
world -we act through the machines, losing
the capacity to make knowledge emerge if it
depend of bodily engagement. Now techno-
logy owns the genuine agency in the crea-
tion of knowledge. This contrast with the
conceptualization of the Present as actuality,
as conjunction of Presents. These Presents
doesn't follow straight chronological lines
like the ones conceived under the modern
idea of progress and technology-based ideo-
logies, but the Present is no more than an
instant, just the instant of the movement, and
the Past does not exist anymore since is
impossible to repeat or reproduce something
that change at every second (Bergson 1963).
In the checking, comparison attitude over
the pairs of pics of the artwork, the time
passing is corroborated: the pics changes at
every second as the viewer takes awareness
of the dots.
“The ontology of the dot” is only a contribu-
tion to the line of Art-Archaeology, trying to
theorize in archaeology through the active
participation with both artistic and archaeo-
logical practices. This is a theoretical propo-
sition born in the ongoing process of attend a
meeting in Kyoto. What is the relation
between the meeting and this work? Theory
depends of inspiration, as art. In this sense, I
do not understand theoretical thought out of
practice as if were a collateral effect of
processual analysis. Theory is also about
acting, and I act doing this artwork. To point
out the existence of dots into the archaeolo-
gical practice and the dot as concept of meta-
morphosis that can be applied to processes
of fragmentation and unification, just exem-
plify how the textual understanding of mate-
riality is too far from real growing nature of
things. This is the trick: the 'ontology of the
dot' is an oxymoron. I hope to have shown
some possibilities for creativity beyond
CONCLUSIONS
In this paper I have tried to theorize about
those entities that articulates the archaeolo-
gical practice, which are not natural nor
cultural, neither physical nor mental, but a
mixture. According to this perspective,
knowledge is not constructed nor discove-
red, but is emergent through practice (Simo-
netti 2013). This departs from the concep-
tion of epistemology as an artificial set of
categories superimposed to the world, in
which human intervention is only a chapter
of the independent life-story of things. In
this sense to talk about the idea of “search
entities in the world” is an unsuccessful
enterprise -such entities does not exist onto-
logically.
In the context of the “material turn” in
archaeological theory, archaeologists have
tried to come back to things in order to
understand the role of materiality in the
constitution of the social -a framework
influenced by the actor-network theory of
philosopher Bruno Latour. But this perspec-
tive still takes the human intentions over the
materials, since materials seems to be
conceived as accessible goods to human
projects, as if were at the shelf in the super-
market, and then to be incorporated to
human actions. The distance between mate-
rials and humans is dichotomic. Instead of
this, humans can follow the life-stories of
things, like in the meshwork of Tim Ingold
(eg. Ingold 2008). From a creative point of
view, the first theory focus on results and the
second on processes. However, to focus on
results also involves having a predetermina-
te plan of action, which guide the creative
practice until the income arrives. This is
clear in the high technology since based on
play this role like an instrument between
human intentions and data in form of episte-
mological 'truth'. With any creative engage-
ment of the capacities of our body working
with the materials, this process implies a
distance. In addition, this distance is based
on the sight, on incomes to be contemplated
resulted from pre-established plans and
designs to be implemented in advance. This
doctrine is called ocularcentrism (Jay 1993).
Nevertheless, in this exercise I have tried to
avoid this hegemony of the specular. To use
visual incomes to talk about ontology could
be contradictory, so I made a direct observa-
tion through the scope of archaeological
photo-ethnography. This visual essay then is
not an artistic work but a creative process of
investigation, since the final income is not
the result of a premeditated plan but the
incidental result of the very process of iden-
tification of the 'dots'. It is incidental becau-
se, as surrealist’s states in the 1920s, there
are many alternative realities, which can
lead to unexpected entities.
The artistic work takes here the form of text,
photographs and readers imagination.
There are not a unique interpretation since
the identification of these dots are not objec-
tive. Indeed the claim of this paper is to point
out the 'ontology of the dot', but what actua-
lly have been shown are several typologies
of dots. Then dots may be epistemological,
artificial entities I superimpose over the
material world, as I physically did in the
edition of the pics. In addition, these types
are a pre-established categories used to
divide the several kinds of dots. If I did so is
because I felt something in these places,
independently if that sensation can be called
'dots'. Instead of give the name 'dot' to some
features of things that I perceived, some
features of things attracted my attention due
to its kinetic implications -then I named
them.
The evocative power of the artwork is also
part of our human condition. In this time of
anomia, liquid culture and high technology
visual terms. The essay is just the income of
a process where a symbol, the dot, were
traced in the ontology of materials. Howe-
ver, this is also a kind of poetical analysis
that guide us beneath the certainties of
modern archaeology.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
38
we are living, non quantifiable goods sounds
useless. Specially high technology has been
conceived as exclusive mediator with the
world -we act through the machines, losing
the capacity to make knowledge emerge if it
depend of bodily engagement. Now techno-
logy owns the genuine agency in the crea-
tion of knowledge. This contrast with the
conceptualization of the Present as actuality,
as conjunction of Presents. These Presents
doesn't follow straight chronological lines
like the ones conceived under the modern
idea of progress and technology-based ideo-
logies, but the Present is no more than an
instant, just the instant of the movement, and
the Past does not exist anymore since is
impossible to repeat or reproduce something
that change at every second (Bergson 1963).
In the checking, comparison attitude over
the pairs of pics of the artwork, the time
passing is corroborated: the pics changes at
every second as the viewer takes awareness
of the dots.
“The ontology of the dot” is only a contribu-
tion to the line of Art-Archaeology, trying to
theorize in archaeology through the active
participation with both artistic and archaeo-
logical practices. This is a theoretical propo-
sition born in the ongoing process of attend a
meeting in Kyoto. What is the relation
between the meeting and this work? Theory
depends of inspiration, as art. In this sense, I
do not understand theoretical thought out of
practice as if were a collateral effect of
processual analysis. Theory is also about
acting, and I act doing this artwork. To point
out the existence of dots into the archaeolo-
gical practice and the dot as concept of meta-
morphosis that can be applied to processes
of fragmentation and unification, just exem-
plify how the textual understanding of mate-
riality is too far from real growing nature of
things. This is the trick: the 'ontology of the
dot' is an oxymoron. I hope to have shown
some possibilities for creativity beyond
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
In this paper I have tried to theorize about
those entities that articulates the archaeolo-
gical practice, which are not natural nor
cultural, neither physical nor mental, but a
mixture. According to this perspective,
knowledge is not constructed nor discove-
red, but is emergent through practice (Simo-
netti 2013). This departs from the concep-
tion of epistemology as an artificial set of
categories superimposed to the world, in
which human intervention is only a chapter
of the independent life-story of things. In
this sense to talk about the idea of “search
entities in the world” is an unsuccessful
enterprise -such entities does not exist onto-
logically.
In the context of the “material turn” in
archaeological theory, archaeologists have
tried to come back to things in order to
understand the role of materiality in the
constitution of the social -a framework
influenced by the actor-network theory of
philosopher Bruno Latour. But this perspec-
tive still takes the human intentions over the
materials, since materials seems to be
conceived as accessible goods to human
projects, as if were at the shelf in the super-
market, and then to be incorporated to
human actions. The distance between mate-
rials and humans is dichotomic. Instead of
this, humans can follow the life-stories of
things, like in the meshwork of Tim Ingold
(eg. Ingold 2008). From a creative point of
view, the first theory focus on results and the
second on processes. However, to focus on
results also involves having a predetermina-
te plan of action, which guide the creative
practice until the income arrives. This is
clear in the high technology since based on
play this role like an instrument between
human intentions and data in form of episte-
mological 'truth'. With any creative engage-
ment of the capacities of our body working
with the materials, this process implies a
distance. In addition, this distance is based
on the sight, on incomes to be contemplated
resulted from pre-established plans and
designs to be implemented in advance. This
doctrine is called ocularcentrism (Jay 1993).
Nevertheless, in this exercise I have tried to
avoid this hegemony of the specular. To use
visual incomes to talk about ontology could
be contradictory, so I made a direct observa-
tion through the scope of archaeological
photo-ethnography. This visual essay then is
not an artistic work but a creative process of
investigation, since the final income is not
the result of a premeditated plan but the
incidental result of the very process of iden-
tification of the 'dots'. It is incidental becau-
se, as surrealist’s states in the 1920s, there
are many alternative realities, which can
lead to unexpected entities.
The artistic work takes here the form of text,
photographs and readers imagination.
There are not a unique interpretation since
the identification of these dots are not objec-
tive. Indeed the claim of this paper is to point
out the 'ontology of the dot', but what actua-
lly have been shown are several typologies
of dots. Then dots may be epistemological,
artificial entities I superimpose over the
material world, as I physically did in the
edition of the pics. In addition, these types
are a pre-established categories used to
divide the several kinds of dots. If I did so is
because I felt something in these places,
independently if that sensation can be called
'dots'. Instead of give the name 'dot' to some
features of things that I perceived, some
features of things attracted my attention due
to its kinetic implications -then I named
them.
The evocative power of the artwork is also
part of our human condition. In this time of
anomia, liquid culture and high technology
visual terms. The essay is just the income of
a process where a symbol, the dot, were
traced in the ontology of materials. Howe-
ver, this is also a kind of poetical analysis
that guide us beneath the certainties of
modern archaeology.
I wish to express my gratitude to my family
for their support in my archaeological
life-adventure, and to all the actors of my
academic and artistic life during 2016: the
Archaeo-drome team and students, La Esta-
ción art-centre, Monte Miravete 2016 cam-
paign team and volunteers, and also to dr.
Matsumoto, dr. Barth and dr. Georghiu for
their important several roles in my attendan-
ce to WAC-8 in Japan and therefore in my
further inspirations. Thanks to IKEA Murcia
store to hire me during enough time to have
the chance to save money to start my PhD
studies, also for reinforce my desire to make
a better science in society knowing the real
world outside academia. Thanks to dr. V.
Fernández and dr. C. Simonetti for allow me
to research about what I want. All contents
error remains by my responsibility, especia-
lly those of topic's misunderstandings and
my argument’s contradictions. I hope to
have inspired you... Uncharted fields always
seems to be marvelous. Thanks.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
39
Argent, G. (2013). Inked: Human-horse apprenticeship,
tattoos, and time in the Pazyryk world. Society &
animals, 21(2), 178-193.
Bergson, H. (1963). La evolución creadora. In H.
Bergson. Obras Escogidas. Madrid, España: Aguilar.
Castañeda, Q. & Matthews, C. (2008). Ethnographic
archaeologies: reflections on stakehold-ers and archaeolo-
gical practices. Walnut Creek, United Estates:
Unidos: Altamira.
Cochrane, A. & Russell, I. (eds.). (2013). Art and archaeo-
logy: collaborations, conversations, criticisms. New
York, United Estate: Springer.
Clifford, J. (1988). On ethnographic surrealism. In J.
Clifford (ed.). The predicament of cul-ture. Cambrid-
ge, United Estate: Harvard University Press.
Edgeworth, M. (2010). On the boundary: new perspecti-
ves from ethnography of archaeology. In D.
Garrow & T. Yarrow (eds.). Archaeology and Anthro-
pology. Oxford, England: Ox-ford Books.
Edgeworth, M. (2006). Ethnographies of archaeological
practice: cultural encounters, materi-al transformations.
Walnut Creek, United Estates: Altamira.
Edgeworth, M. (2003). Acts of discovery: An ethnography of
archaeological practice (Vol. 1131). Oxford, England:
British Archaeological Reports.
Fernández, V. (2006). Una Arqueología Crítica: ciencia,
ética y política en la construcción del Pasado. Madrid,
España: Crítica.
González-Ruibal, A. (2012). Hacia otra Arqueología:
diez propuestas. Complutum, 23(2), 103-116.
Hamilakis, Y. (2014). Archaeology and the senses: human
experience, memory, and affect. Cambridge, England:
Cambridge University Press.
Hamilakis, Y. & Ifantidis, F. (2016). Camera Kalaureia: An
Archaeological Photo-Ethnography. Oxford, England:
Archaeopress.
Hamilakis, Y. & Anagnostopoulos, A. (2009). What is
archaeological ethnography? Public ar-chaeology,
8(2-3), 65-87.
Hamilakis, Y., Anagnostopoulos, A., & Ifantidis, F.
(2009). Postcards from the edge of time: archaeolo-
gy, photography, archaeological ethnography (a
photo-essay). Public Archaeology, 8(2-3), 283-309.
Hamilakis, Y., Pluciennik, M., and Tarlow, S. (2001).
Academic performances, artistic presen-tations.
Assemblage, (6), 7-21.
Heider, K. (1988). The Rashômon effect: When ethno-
graphers disagree. American Anthropologist, 90(1),
73-81.
Ingold, T. (2001). Anthropological perspectives on
technology. In T. Ingold. Beyond art and technology:
the anthropology of skill. Albuquerque, México:
University of New México Press.
Ingold, T. (2008). When ANT meets SPIDER: Social
REFERENCES
theory for arthropods. In C. Knappett & L.
Malafouris (eds.). Material Agency. Boston, United
Estate: Springer.
Ingold, T. (2013). Making Anthropology, archaeology, art
and architecture. London, England: Routledge.
Ingold, T. & Hallam, E. (2007). Creativity and Cultural
Improvisation. An Introduction. In E. Hallam & T.
Ingold (eds.). Creativity and Cultural Improvisa-
tion. Oxford, England: Berg.
Jay, M. (1993). Downcast eyes: The denigration of vision in
twentieth-century French thought. California, United
Estate: University of California Press.
Marmol, J. (2016). Proyecto Arqueológico Monte Miravete:
Foto-etnografía arqueológica #1. Un estudio visual y
sensorial del trabajo de campo de la campaña de
prospección arqueoló-gica de 2016 (Unpublished
book). Monte Miravete Project, Murcia, España.
Marmol, J. (2017). Dropping the trowel: three narratives
and one creative archaeology. AP Journa, (6),
75-116.
Moreno, W. (2013) Fotoetnografía educativa: una ruta
para comprender la cultura corporal escolarizada.
Revista Iberoamericana de educación, (62), 119-141.
Simonetti, C. (2013). En presencia de lo ausente.
Rastreando materiales en movimiento. Papeles de
Trabajo, 7(11), 40-61.
Simonetti, C. (2015). The stratification of time. Time &
Society, 24(2), 139-162.
Layton, R. (2003). Art and agency: a reassessment.
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 9(3),
447-464.
Shanks, M. (2004). Three rooms: Archaeology and
performance. Journal of Social Archaeolo-gy, 4(2),
147-180.
Shanks, M. (2012). The Archaeological Imagination.
Walnut Creek, United Estate: Left Coast Press.
Shanks, M. & Pearson, M. (2001). Theatre/archaeology:
Reflections on a hybrid genre. London, England:
Routledge.
Shanks, M. & Zvabo, C. (2013). Archaeology and photo-
graphy: A pragmatology. In A. Gon-zález-Ruibal
(ed.). Reclaiming Archaeology. Beyond the tropes of
Modernity (pp. 89-102). London, England: Routled-
ge.
Schneider, A. (2017). Alternative Art and Anthropology:
Global Encounters. London, England: Bloomsbury.
Renfrew, C. (2003). Figuring it out. Where do we come from?
What are we? Where are we going? London, England:
Thames & Hudson.
Ruiz, G. (2014). Fotografía y Arqueología: ventanas al
pasado con cristales traslúcidos. In E. Baquedano
(ed). Jose Latova. 40 años de Fotografía arqueológica
española. Madrid, España: Comunidad de Madrid.
Tilley, C., Hamilton, S. & Bender, B. (2000). Art and the
RePresentation of the Past. Journal of the Royal
Anthropological Institute, 6(1), 35-62.
Valdez-Tullet, J. & Chittock, H. (2016). Archaeology with
Art. Oxford, England: Archaeo-press.
Van Dyke, R. (2006). Seeing the past: Visual media in
Archaeology. American Anthropologist, 108(2),
370-375.
Weebmor, T. (2005). Teotihuacán, Mexico. Mediating
Monumentality: An Experiment. Recovered from
http://traumwerk.stanford.edu/teotihuacan
Witmore, C. (2004). Four archaeological engagements
with place mediating bodily experience through
peripatetic video. Visual anthropology review, 20(2),
57-72.
Witmore, C. (2006). Vision, Media, Noise and the
Percolation of Time Symmetrical Approaches to
the Mediation of the Material World. Journal of
material culture, 11(3), 267-292.
REVISTA CHAKIÑAN, 2017, Nº.3, DICIEMBRE, (20-40)
ISSN 2550-6722
40
Argent, G. (2013). Inked: Human-horse apprenticeship,
tattoos, and time in the Pazyryk world. Society &
animals, 21(2), 178-193.
Bergson, H. (1963). La evolución creadora. In H.
Bergson. Obras Escogidas. Madrid, España: Aguilar.
Castañeda, Q. & Matthews, C. (2008). Ethnographic
archaeologies: reflections on stakehold-ers and archaeolo-
gical practices. Walnut Creek, United Estates:
Unidos: Altamira.
Cochrane, A. & Russell, I. (eds.). (2013). Art and archaeo-
logy: collaborations, conversations, criticisms. New
York, United Estate: Springer.
Clifford, J. (1988). On ethnographic surrealism. In J.
Clifford (ed.). The predicament of cul-ture. Cambrid-
ge, United Estate: Harvard University Press.
Edgeworth, M. (2010). On the boundary: new perspecti-
ves from ethnography of archaeology. In D.
Garrow & T. Yarrow (eds.). Archaeology and Anthro-
pology. Oxford, England: Ox-ford Books.
Edgeworth, M. (2006). Ethnographies of archaeological
practice: cultural encounters, materi-al transformations.
Walnut Creek, United Estates: Altamira.
Edgeworth, M. (2003). Acts of discovery: An ethnography of
archaeological practice (Vol. 1131). Oxford, England:
British Archaeological Reports.
Fernández, V. (2006). Una Arqueología Crítica: ciencia,
ética y política en la construcción del Pasado. Madrid,
España: Crítica.
González-Ruibal, A. (2012). Hacia otra Arqueología:
diez propuestas. Complutum, 23(2), 103-116.
Hamilakis, Y. (2014). Archaeology and the senses: human
experience, memory, and affect. Cambridge, England:
Cambridge University Press.
Hamilakis, Y. & Ifantidis, F. (2016). Camera Kalaureia: An
Archaeological Photo-Ethnography. Oxford, England:
Archaeopress.
Hamilakis, Y. & Anagnostopoulos, A. (2009). What is
archaeological ethnography? Public ar-chaeology,
8(2-3), 65-87.
Hamilakis, Y., Anagnostopoulos, A., & Ifantidis, F.
(2009). Postcards from the edge of time: archaeolo-
gy, photography, archaeological ethnography (a
photo-essay). Public Archaeology, 8(2-3), 283-309.
Hamilakis, Y., Pluciennik, M., and Tarlow, S. (2001).
Academic performances, artistic presen-tations.
Assemblage, (6), 7-21.
Heider, K. (1988). The Rashômon effect: When ethno-
graphers disagree. American Anthropologist, 90(1),
73-81.
Ingold, T. (2001). Anthropological perspectives on
technology. In T. Ingold. Beyond art and technology:
the anthropology of skill. Albuquerque, México:
University of New México Press.
Ingold, T. (2008). When ANT meets SPIDER: Social
theory for arthropods. In C. Knappett & L.
Malafouris (eds.). Material Agency. Boston, United
Estate: Springer.
Ingold, T. (2013). Making Anthropology, archaeology, art
and architecture. London, England: Routledge.
Ingold, T. & Hallam, E. (2007). Creativity and Cultural
Improvisation. An Introduction. In E. Hallam & T.
Ingold (eds.). Creativity and Cultural Improvisa-
tion. Oxford, England: Berg.
Jay, M. (1993). Downcast eyes: The denigration of vision in
twentieth-century French thought. California, United
Estate: University of California Press.
Marmol, J. (2016). Proyecto Arqueológico Monte Miravete:
Foto-etnografía arqueológica #1. Un estudio visual y
sensorial del trabajo de campo de la campaña de
prospección arqueoló-gica de 2016 (Unpublished
book). Monte Miravete Project, Murcia, España.
Marmol, J. (2017). Dropping the trowel: three narratives
and one creative archaeology. AP Journa, (6),
75-116.
Moreno, W. (2013) Fotoetnografía educativa: una ruta
para comprender la cultura corporal escolarizada.
Revista Iberoamericana de educación, (62), 119-141.
Simonetti, C. (2013). En presencia de lo ausente.
Rastreando materiales en movimiento. Papeles de
Trabajo, 7(11), 40-61.
Simonetti, C. (2015). The stratification of time. Time &
Society, 24(2), 139-162.
Layton, R. (2003). Art and agency: a reassessment.
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 9(3),
447-464.
Shanks, M. (2004). Three rooms: Archaeology and
performance. Journal of Social Archaeolo-gy, 4(2),
147-180.
Shanks, M. (2012). The Archaeological Imagination.
Walnut Creek, United Estate: Left Coast Press.
Shanks, M. & Pearson, M. (2001). Theatre/archaeology:
Reflections on a hybrid genre. London, England:
Routledge.
Shanks, M. & Zvabo, C. (2013). Archaeology and photo-
graphy: A pragmatology. In A. Gon-zález-Ruibal
(ed.). Reclaiming Archaeology. Beyond the tropes of
Modernity (pp. 89-102). London, England: Routled-
ge.
Schneider, A. (2017). Alternative Art and Anthropology:
Global Encounters. London, England: Bloomsbury.
Renfrew, C. (2003). Figuring it out. Where do we come from?
What are we? Where are we going? London, England:
Thames & Hudson.
Ruiz, G. (2014). Fotografía y Arqueología: ventanas al
pasado con cristales traslúcidos. In E. Baquedano
(ed). Jose Latova. 40 años de Fotografía arqueológica
española. Madrid, España: Comunidad de Madrid.
Tilley, C., Hamilton, S. & Bender, B. (2000). Art and the
RePresentation of the Past. Journal of the Royal
Anthropological Institute, 6(1), 35-62.
Valdez-Tullet, J. & Chittock, H. (2016). Archaeology with
Art. Oxford, England: Archaeo-press.
Van Dyke, R. (2006). Seeing the past: Visual media in
Archaeology. American Anthropologist, 108(2),
370-375.
Weebmor, T. (2005). Teotihuacán, Mexico. Mediating
Monumentality: An Experiment. Recovered from
http://traumwerk.stanford.edu/teotihuacan
Witmore, C. (2004). Four archaeological engagements
with place mediating bodily experience through
peripatetic video. Visual anthropology review, 20(2),
57-72.
Witmore, C. (2006). Vision, Media, Noise and the
Percolation of Time Symmetrical Approaches to
the Mediation of the Material World. Journal of
material culture, 11(3), 267-292.