Conversations with the Artist (2)
My first teacher told me
                that what sculpture involved
 was being a God. He was not talking
 about the old ways, about fashioning
                a man out of a rib.
 Out of the earth. A god can see something
 that does not exist yet in the world. Who
                could have imagined the giraffe,
 the octopus, the flounder? Who
 could have imagined our sharp sensibilities,
                our contortions? The materials
 are all there—eyes and blood and respiration,
 but still, they get made new. Now I know
                that these days such a view
 is against science, but the idea of a god is as real
 as god is not. A scientist who sees
                what has been done
 versus one who can make straw out of gold.
 Or more like plastic out of petroleum.
                Paper out of trees. You
 have to decide which kind you will be.
 We’re mistaken when we equate the wise
                and the prophetic. You’re always
 looking either backwards or forwards.
 This piece puts you on a precipice.
                It’s up to you
 which way you fall. You see—it’s all there.
 The scientist and the artist were once one—
                how else could you record
 what you saw? How else, find a way of seeing?
                    
                        Rebecca Morgan Frank, "Conversations with the Artist (2)" from The Spokes of Venus.  Copyright © 2016 by Rebecca Morgan Frank.  Reprinted by permission of Carnegie Mellon University Press.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        The Spokes of Venus
                                                                                                                                                                    (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2016)