
The Rainmaker is a milestone in the acclaimed bronze sculptures created by Dave McGary. It depicts a 12th century Jornada Mogollon Shaman, holding a beautiful native olla pot, pouring water, with a sacred macaw resting on his shoulder. Rainmakers' archaeologist Don Clifton headed a team, voluntarily funded by the developers that examined the area for archaeological information. They discovered a residential subterranean pit-house site. This site will be preserved as a park and used for dispensing information about the ancient culture. With approval by the Historical Society of New Mexico, artifacts from this site will be displayed at the Clubhouse once completed. Homage has also been given by naming streets for extinct and current tribes of New Mexico. By 900 A.D, the Joronada Mogollon culture ranged in the area we now know as Eastern Arizona to the Rio Grande River. The Mogollon people have disappeared into the mists of the past and have no known living groups. By the mid-1600's when the Spanish arrived to the area, the Jornada Mogollon had ceased to exist.
Water signified life for these natives and it was literally a matter of life or death. Though the area they inhabited received limited amounts of moisture each year, the life-giving gift from the sky determined their crop size. Certain members of this group possessed the knowledge to invoke the power to bring the vital rain. These were the Shaman; they were honored and held in the highest esteem. The brilliance of the sacred macaw is portrayed resting on his shoulder. These birds, revered for their beauty and ability to speak, were considered the carriers of the Sun. They were acquired at great cost in trade from their southern neighbors. Carrying this bird was another indication of the Shaman's status.
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