Three side paintings complete the mural—the Yaqui Deer Dancer, the Talking Tree, and the children’s paintings. The Yaqui Deer Dancer mural shows a Deer Dancer and a Yaqui Pascola Dancer to his right, both figures that predate Christianity and represent their most ancient traditions and religion. The church represents the introduction of Catholicism by Jesuits in the early 1600s.
The Yaqui Talking Tree mural depicts their creation story. There was a tree in the Rio Yaqui wilderness that was humming and making sounds, which the Surem (ancient Yaquis) did not understand. Sea Hamut (Flower Woman) sent her daughters to interpret the trees sounds. The tree foretold all of the changes to come to the Surem. A new religion (Catholicism) would be introduced, baptism, new technologies, new animals, war. If the Surem, who were immortal, accepted the new religion, death would come along with it. It is said that those who did not accept what the Yaqui Talking Tree predicted, went back to nature. Contemporary Yaquis are descendants of those who did not accept what the Talking Tree said was coming. Martinez is a Native American contemporary abstract painter. He is a member of the Pascua Yaqui Tribe from New Penjamo (in Scottsdale), the smallest of six Yaqui settlements in Arizona. He lives in New York City.
Location: 7700 East Roosevelt Street, Scottsdale, AZ 85257, USA
Artist: Mario Martinez (b. 1953)
Dates: Completed 1999
