The car-age
Patrick Nagatani
Bentley, Stonehenge, Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, England, 1987
Nagatani informs us that in 1985, a Japanese archeologist named Ryoichi received a mysterious set of maps that led him to excavate numerous historic and contemporary sites around the world noted for their cultural significance. For fifteen years Ryoichi and his team secretly excavated Stonehenge, Chaco Canyon, Ayers Rock, Kitt Peak National Observatory, the very Large Array radio-telescope, and other sites. At each location they unearthed a different make of car. Buried in the volcanic ash at Herculaneum they found a Ferrari. In the foundations of the Observatory at Chichen Itza was a Jaguar, while a Bentley emerged from Salisbury Plain near Stonehenge. Ryoichi had discovered a worldwide “automobile culture” that appeared to parallel our own, although it was anachronistic both historically and geographically. After unearthing the artifacts, Ryoichi’s team covered up all evidence of their digs, but not before Nagatani had photographed each site, providing the only existing record of Ryoichi’s discoveries.
Excavations: Recent Photographs by Patrick Nagatani Andrew Smith Gallery, Santa Fe, US, 2001
Model A Woody, National Astronomy Observatory (VLA), NM, USA, 1997
Volkswagon ‘Beetles’, Xi’an, Necropolis of Mt. Li’, China, 1988




augustus 31st, 2010 at 17:13
In terms of amazing high class cars, the Europeans retain the crown, thanks to such popular brands as Rolls-Royce, Bentley, Aston Martin, and Maserati. Indulge in luxury, enjoy life.
mei 8th, 2011 at 00:36
Where should i click: Like in this post? Do you have a Fan Page?