Dr. Van Stone received his undergraduate degree in Physics in 1973 and worked in the gamma-ray astronomy laboratory at the University of New Hampshire, until lured away to self-employment as a calligrapher and carver. In the world of calligraphy and type design, he established himself as an expert in paleography and the evolution of written forms, teaching and lecturing widely on the subject for the next twenty years.
A lifelong autodidact, he constantly seized opportunities
to study in the reading rooms and storerooms of libraries
and museums great and small throughout the world. A
stint as a clay animator at Will Vinton Studios and
study with netsuke carver Saito Bishu Sensei
in Kawaguchi, Japan, focused his sculptural skills as
well as his understanding of the cultures of animation,
film-making, and Japan. A Guggenheim Fellowship took
him around the world, studying and photographing manuscripts
and inscriptions of many nations, including medieval
Europe and the Islamic world, the classical world of
Rome and Greece, the Far East of Southeast Asia and
Japan, and the hieroglyphs of Egypt and Mesoamerica.
His unique approach to understanding a script is learning
to write and carve it.
There is something one learns by actually making such
an artwork that one can learn in no other way. Mark's
unique combination of scientific training, passion for
beauty and calligraphic expertise has bestowed profound
insight into the script technique of all these diverse
traditions. This expertise has led to some peculiar
jobs, such as producing movie props like the "Pirate's
Code Book" for the Pirates of the Caribbean
films.
In the 1980s he began to focus on the most complex,
beautiful, and little understood script, Maya hieroglyphs,
and entered the University of Texas graduate school
under the renowned Linda Schele in 1994. He earned his
MA in 1996 and his Ph.D. in 2005. During this time,
he co-authored Reading the Maya Glyphs with
Michael Coe, now the standard introduction to the topic.
He appeared on-camera as the "writing hand" of Gaspar
Chi, Bishop Landa and various Maya scribes in Breaking
the Maya Code, the stunning documentary film that
took top honors at TAC Festival 2009. He is presently
Professor of Art History at Southwestern College and
in 2010 published a new book, 2012: Science and
Prophecy of the Ancient Maya. His dual background
in science and art is essential to his unique understanding
of Maya calligraphy and of the development of all writing
systems. His insight into Maya literature gives him
a rare ability to interpret the Maya calendar in an
authoritative and trustworthy manner and his presentation
style is truly engaging.