Grass Marker Beauty

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Sociologist W. Lloyd Warner was one of the first to study graveyard iconography and burial practices. In 1959 Warner wrote a monograph, The Living and the Dead, where he asserted, “cemeteries are collective representatives which reflect and express many of the community’s basic beliefs and values….” Life is reflected in the cemetery. One of the 20th Century changes that is evident is the influence of technology and rising labor costs. That can be seen in a type of gravestone called the grass marker. That is a gravestone that is absolutely flat with the ground—level with the grass—hence the name.

By designing markers in this way, large swaths of grass can be moved with ease on riding lawn mowers, reducing the cost of labor to move around various shaped gravestones. Now whole cemeteries often called Memorial Parks have nothing but this type of gravestone.

The unfortunate aspect of this, is that quite often these grass markers can be unique but are often overlooked.

One example of a beautiful gravestone in the Lake View Cemetery at Seattle, Washington, is for Michael Joseph Ehle, an artist from the Seattle area. Ehle grew up in Salinas, California, and started drawing at a very early age and he never stopped. Even when he was barely getting by as an artist, he washed dishes and took odd jobs to continue his art. His diligence and hard work paid off—now his works hang in the Tacoma Art Museum and the University of Washington Medical Center and the offices of Microsoft.

Ehle’s flat gray grass marker is designed with the graphic quality of a woodcut. While I don’t know what the symbolism is for the piece of artwork chosen for his marker, it is definitely reminiscent of his bold expressive artwork. The young man smoking with a raven on his shoulder looks wryly toward the passerby with a knowing expression.

If you don’t look down once in a while in a cemetery, you could miss the lowly grass marker that might have some surprises carved into the face of the granite.

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5 Responses to Grass Marker Beauty

  1. Linda Ehle-Callens says:

    I am one of Michael’s three sisters. Along with his niece, we chose this linocut of his, and what we thought to be the perfect type of stone to be engraved, because we knew Michael would approve. Thanks you so much for this article and for recognizing my brother’s brilliance. He chose his own burial place and would be happy that strangers might be curious about his raven.

    • When I visited the cemetery about 30 school children were doing a grave rubbing of Bruce Lee’s gravestone. I thought about the beautiful linocut on your brother’s gravestone and how they could have learned not only about his expressive art but also about a local and famous artist. That was a missed opportunity for the school kids.

  2. Mary Ehle says:

    I was so surprised and pleased to see this acknowledgement of my brother’s gravestone. I’m Michael’s oldest sister, and my daughter and I were responsible for the stone. The cutting is, of course, Michael’s work.

  3. Michelle Ehle says:

    This sweet to see, thank you. In addition to Tacoma’s museum their show Art AIDS America is traveling around, in the Bronx right now I think. If you ever do anything regarding art at the end of life let me know, he produced sketches while in hospice. I find them interesting. Michelle Ehle – Michael’s niece.

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