Since the days of Auguste Rodin, sculpture has often occupied a special place in the artistic imagination: what is it really trying to say? Consider the works of American sculptor Charles Ray and his unique ability to speak through his creations. Even though it is clear that, in his "Archangel," this sculpture has little to do with communications from the divine, it nonetheless seems to reflect, or so the critics say, transformation. Or what theologians call an apotheosis: a transformation into God.
Yet on the other hand, most of us wish, in some way, to be different than we are today. We may wish for better people skills, increased insight into what life means, greater compassion for our fellow humans, deeper love for our spouses or significant other, and so forth. Bottom line, we want to find our greater point. Even if it is a point that only we define.
And we will do so whether we believe in God or not. When I consider Ray's "Archangel," I therefore ponder how much it expresses who we are. Be it people in passage, people in stasis, or some blending of the two, we long to see who and what else we can be.
After all, we're purposeful creatures in an intentionally purposeful universe. Otherwise, we would have no claim to aspire to anything.
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