John Moore
The magic of the rain
Hardground copperplate etching
167.5 x 94.5 x 5cm Framed
Copyright The Artist
This image depicts the story of the Rain Animal in Khoi-San folklore. The Khoi-San,although nomadic, would often inhabit caves for extended periods of time, living in adeep relationship with the...
This image depicts the story of the Rain Animal in Khoi-San folklore. The Khoi-San,although nomadic, would often inhabit caves for extended periods of time, living in adeep relationship with the land. Their survival depended entirely on the natural world. Inwinter the grasses would dry, the grazing animals would migrate, and with them wentfood and security. Drought was not simply environmental — it was spiritual andcommunal.In times of great need, the tribe gathered for the trance dance. They would clap, sing,and move rhythmically around the fire, or sit together clapping in a unified pulse.Through repetition, breath, and song, energy would build. The shaman, entering alteredstates of consciousness, would cross into the spirit realm to call the elusive RainAnimal.In this work, I have depicted the Rain Animal as a giraffe — a vertical being, a breacherof realms, an axis between earth and sky. For me it is an archangelic presence. Itdescends through the clouded spirit world, breaking the boundary between seen andunseen. The shaman ties a string — charged with energy and muti — around theanimal’s nose and leads it across the spiritual landscape, guiding it to the precise placewhere rain is needed. He knows this terrain intimately, both physically andmetaphysically. Once positioned, the Rain Animal releases its sacred, life-giving water.This whole act is performed in the spirit realm. When the shaman returns to his body,the tribe celebrates. Days later, the rains come. The grasses return. The animals follow.Life is restored.Shaman surrounds the giraffe in the composition, guiding it in ritual concentration.Energy pulses through them and through the animal in undulating lines, suggestingvibration, sound, and spiritual electricity.Seven rollers move through the sky and landscape — messengers of the storm. They arenot passive birds but active carriers of charge and transformation. In many traditions,the number seven signifies completion, spiritual power, and cosmic order. Here, theseven rollers mark the fullness of the ritual. They orbit the Rain Animal, stitching sky toearth, acting as witnesses and conduits of the brewing storm. Their wings cut throughthe dense atmosphere, echoing the rhythmic clapping of the trance dance below.The upper realm of the work is dense with intricate detail — a living tapestry of animals,symbols, and forms interwoven in near-chaotic harmony. Nothing is empty. Every spacehums with presence. The spirit world is layered and complex, reflecting the richness ofKhoi-San cosmology where animals, ancestors, weather, and human beings exist in a
dynamic relationship. Patterns spiral, overlap, and transform, suggestingmetamorphosis and the constant movement between states of being.Below, the land undulates in rhythmic horizontal bands, echoing breath and chant. Eventhe earth appears alive, vibrating in anticipation of rain. Lightning-like lines streamdownward from the giraffe’s mouth, connecting heaven to soil. The rain does not simplyfall — it is conducted, life giving.The intricate copperplate etching technique mirrors this cosmology. Every mark isintentional. Fine cross-hatching, dense patterning, and elaborate interlocking formsrequire patience and devotion — much like ritual itself. The detail invites prolongedviewing, revealing new creatures, symbols, and energies over time. It reflects aworldview where nothing exists in isolation; everything is interconnected, layered, andalive with spirit.This work becomes both landscape and ceremony — a map of spiritual geography, arecord of communal resilience, and a meditation on the sacred relationship betweenhumans, animals, rain and environment.
dynamic relationship. Patterns spiral, overlap, and transform, suggestingmetamorphosis and the constant movement between states of being.Below, the land undulates in rhythmic horizontal bands, echoing breath and chant. Eventhe earth appears alive, vibrating in anticipation of rain. Lightning-like lines streamdownward from the giraffe’s mouth, connecting heaven to soil. The rain does not simplyfall — it is conducted, life giving.The intricate copperplate etching technique mirrors this cosmology. Every mark isintentional. Fine cross-hatching, dense patterning, and elaborate interlocking formsrequire patience and devotion — much like ritual itself. The detail invites prolongedviewing, revealing new creatures, symbols, and energies over time. It reflects aworldview where nothing exists in isolation; everything is interconnected, layered, andalive with spirit.This work becomes both landscape and ceremony — a map of spiritual geography, arecord of communal resilience, and a meditation on the sacred relationship betweenhumans, animals, rain and environment.
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