|
|
Lilith's
Flight: (edition of 8), bronze
Size (in): 26H x 18D x 10"W on a black granite cube base; weight:
75 lbs. $5000 CAD including freight.
|
|
Click
a thumbnail above to show alternate larger views. Can't afford a
sculpture right now? Consider donating to support the website, the art,
the philosophy, the cause of beauty...
|
|
The Sculpture: My
sculpted rendition of the Lilith myth captures the precise moment when
Adam's first wife, with hands raised in prayer, lifts her face, utters
the name of God and begins to rise to the heavens. Adam, oblivious with
desire, embraces her tightly and seeks to hold her down even as her body
urges upward. Wind riffles Lilith's hair; her toes lift. This tense moment
of competing movement and purpose is what I have sought to convey in the
work.
For the ancient rabbis,
Lilith was evil for her defiance. Contemporary feminist readings emphasize
Adam's domineering nature. In reality, both parties are guilty of a
complete refusal to compromise. Thus, their situation is a caution against
selfishness for any couple desirous of a lasting relationship. Lilith
and Adam are mirror images both physically and mentally; with their
eyes closed, both are so absorbed in their own agendas that no communication
passes between them.
This negative equilibrium
is represented, however, as a thing of beauty in Lilith's Flight:
the posture of the figures creates symmetry from front and back and
a wonderful triangular geometry from all sides, which one can observe
in the various views of the sculpture. Lilith herself is a brilliant
gold, as if she is transforming into ethereal light, while Adam remains
an earthier stippled brown.
|
|
The Story:
According to ancient Hebrew myth, Lilith was Adam's first wife. Adam and
Lilith never achieved marital peace together, for when he wished to lie
with her, she took offence at the passive sexual position he demanded.
"Why must I lie beneath you?" she asked. "I was made from
earth just like you and am therefore your equal." Because Adam tried
to compel her to obey by force, Lilith uttered the magic name of God,
rose into the air and left him forever.
(paraphrased from
Robert Graves, Hebrew Myths)
|