NB M45 ^ Class _JJ3_li^l Book.. Copyright^ . — COPYRIGHT DEPOSIIV The White Flame of Sculpture The White Flame of Sculpture BY L. P. P Cedar Rapids, Iowa The Torch Press Nineteen Hundred Nine UBRAR? of CONGRESS Two Gopiet Received DEC 31 ISOti i .» Cepyrient tntry _ fertutRS Copyright, 1908 Oh, spirits twain that walked with me, Whose lofty souls of living flame Have burned me clear of every aim Of lower mark, and set me free ; Receive the broken shards I bring. Your hands have thrilled to life the clay; Your souls have grasped the soul alway Half -hid in line and curves that cling And melt. The heights divine, that fling Their shadows out from arch of brow, You long have swept, with eyes that grow More clear to pierce the veil, the thing 5 Invisible to see; — the God, The Infinite, th' Eterne, that dwells In clay of His own mould ; that swells In every pulse of flesh and blood. My Friend who dwells beyond the stars, I dare not guess to what far height Your vision clear, your deep insight, Are rapt. The Love that never mars Uplifted you. I question not Of work half done, of heights half won. God 's light — of neither moon nor sun - Falls soft upon your happier lot. My Friend who dwells below the stars, Upon your heart is laid the fire Of whitest, holiest art. Still higher "Will flame the torch, wind-blown by airs Of heaven. "With oil and wine of life Deep-drenched; with spices bitter- sweet 6 Enwound ; most costly, rare, and meet For service high, it flames. Through strife And night, God guard your flying feet, God give you steady hand to bear His beacon light. His visions rare Your prize ; His haunting voices sweet, That call you ever from afar ; That call to work more pure and high; That call to heights serene, that lie Beneath the white light of your Star. THE WHITE FLAME OF SCULPTURE It is an art that demands the divinest powers, in their most magnificent play. She is a stern, a mighty mistress ; not to be served with aught but the whole man — soul and body. So served, God knows how she will fill and expand and overwhelm the soul. Thank God her powers of expression can never be found too narrow ; they will stretch away before you like eternity itself. I think one of the most significant things ever said about this art is, that 9 "You now have no time to hurry in your life." Nothing shows more clearly the truth of your art than that. It can no more be hurried than God hurries the mak- ing of the earthly tenement of a soul. It ripens in its own time and comes to the birth. I always see a form more beautiful than I can describe, in the far distance, against the setting sun. It means everything to me; love, art, adoration — one who looks at God. It is sculpture, and it is colorless. The State should endow its genius, and the time will come when this will be done. Heaven knows the men are rare enough, and when found, they 10 ought to have the way made smooth. I understand the value of such circum- stances as urge the development of gen- ius, but I know too that orchids will not grow among wayside stones. I seem to be in a dream for days; whether in the body or out of the body I can scarce tell. Each day, life grows more wonderful. Strange glimpses of another world seem to open to me. These souls that fill us with awe and rapture: Shelley, Keats, Angelo, Dante, — the great souls to whom we are akin, and who draw us after them into the infinite; where are they? And it makes the work here seem small — although we long so infinitely to ac- complish it. // I am unwilling almost to use the word, "art;" the word, "God" comes always instead. I think I know to some degree what it must be — this possession, this crea- tion, this birth agony, and strange de- light. I can well believe the work that leaves such a hand has life, has soul; how could it be otherwise? "What has been felt and lived so in- tensely, others will feel. They cannot help it. It seems to be a law of the best-, this power to make itself felt and believed. Some lives seem spent on the rushing wings of the whirlwind, such is the ra- pidity and force with which they are 12 borne along, both by the course of events and by their own spirit. But when I remember the times of enforced quiet and stillness with which they alternate, and the depth of the spiritual life, I know that the balance is kept and no harm is done — if only the merely physical strength is not over- thrown. I have the greatest possible confidence in this self-regulating power of some temperaments — called artistic. If I did not feel that I understood the secret of the whirlwind it would doubtless frighten me; but it has its point of central calm; and there is a sense — and it is the deepest, truest, and most vital one — in which I have simply no fears for such an one. God knows what He is about when He creates such souls, and there is a 13 point where all interference with them should cease. They must find their own methods. The quiet time will come, bearing its own fruit with it. Another thing: I think any one who understands, feels, the real creative force at work, knows how absolutely absorb- ing it is. It cannot be done at arm's length. It takes for the time — the whole man — or woman — to the last fibre. It is Grod — at work. Is that cloud of fire to be rent with — details? Whither can these souls go that I can- not follow? Their utmost flight cannot outstrip my own power of wing. 14 Their whitest thought, their perfect forms, their visions of beauty; do I not see them too? feel them with utter ab- sorption ? Nothing penetrates to the same God- like depth with me. Where I can do nothing, there I feel most powerfully. Every line of the flesh grasps me in its hold like a giant. Music, words, color, are faint and pale beside it. The pulsing of that white radiance is God. This sky — changing with swift rush- es or soft lapses from the rosy flood of morning to the white heats of full noon. Changing again into the golden curtains of the evening and the soft 15 depths of the night — full of stars: wherever you go, the sky bends over you, deep — loving. I hold yet in my heart some of the golden, level bars of the sky of Italy; the flood of blue and gold over the bay of Naples ! The after glow of Florence ! The soft, soft, tender light of the skies off shore in the Mediterranean. It seems as though the tints of my love for this art melted and changed like that — into the solemn stillness of the midnight, where only God is. "Let me feel the stars. " Never shall I forget the night those words rose into my soul. It was on a night train; I could not sleep, and those deep, throbbing, burn- ing stars beat into my soul with pulsa- 16 tions that took possession of my utter- most capacity. Each one seemed to throb through me — unto G-od! I have been in that land. Its wonders cannot be told; it is God's own. Each moment of such living is worth years of other life. Have you ever, in the intense warmth of a moonlit summer night — such as comes very rarely — felt the moonlight- ed air entering all the pores of your body; bathing your soul, caressing all care away, until you feel yourself akin to all things impalpable; alive to that which can never be said or sung ? That land — -that moonlit air — "Dahin! da- hin!" It is the land of Mignon; it is the land of those, who, having entered, sigh for naught beyond. 17 The Greeks inscribed on their work, "He was making." It is the only true way. It is God's way. Does He ever finish a life — that we can see? And are not those powerful, suggestive, un- finished strokes of the master hand worth far more than the completed Eaphaels? I prefer a Masaccio sketch to a fin- ished Eaphael, and Mantegna's "Para- diso" is full, full of Heaven. It brims over with its strong, seraphic faces. I love it among the best. "Oh, God, let me dream into Thee!" God's dream, deep, ecstatic, eternal. The dream of which His whole creation is the expression. The dream which is the only truth; the heart of the Para- disal Eose. A "pain carved face?" Yes. It is ever so with the "beauty seeking. ' ' 18 It is Orpheus and Eurydice. It is the search through Hades ; the touching, piteous, tender, God quest. A dreamer? Yes. The dreamer who sees for us the things that are truer than any other truth; the only things that endure; the things that carry God into our lives and souls; the radiant, solemn, dream truth. Eest and content can only come to these souls as to the sweeping sea-gull — when, after the strong flight upward, it spreads the broad, snowy wings and floats downward, motionless. Its rest is the tossing wave, which it rides in perfect peace. The sudden modulations in Wagner's music ! How often he will bring a whole 19 flood of harmony down, just half a note, perhaps, and sweep it into another key. That always reminds me of the faint softening or deflection of a full curve in a statue — some of those beautiful lines of the thigh from front to back. That is one of the delights of Wagner. And to watch statuary while music is playing, is, to me, one of the supremest delights in life. How perfectly inexorable is this law of right, and the highest, and the best. We cannot get away from it if we would. We must come to it and grow into it ; readily, nobly, if we will; but scourged into it with a thousand stripes if we will not. I believe every soul will come into it, in the end. It cannot be avoided, be- cause it is the only principle of life. 20 Everything else dies of its own na- ture; sooner or later it must cease to exist. I saw a face today that made a strong impression. A cab passed quickly in which sat a priest — known by his dress. Strong, fine, intellectual, and with a look in the face of a soul that had fought and conquered — perhaps the powers of hell. One of those faces of which even a passing flash makes you stronger, lifts you higher ! This had the look ' ' God satisfied and earth undone ! ' ' — the look of terrible battle and great victory — as though nothing could hurt any more. How God carves faces with handwrit- ing of His own. That is the wonderful, inexplicable part of genius. It is male, it is female ; 2/ it feels all the things out of sight ; all the "perfect round" of life. It knows the mysteries wherewith life is filled, but which so many hearts and minds pass by in utter unconsciousness. It is a larger endowment of life and it knows all its phases ! It absorbs from everything its soul and makes it part of its own. The soul of a man ; the soul of a sunset; the soul of a woman; the soul of a breeze or a tempest. To me, art and love mean one thing and both mean God. I was once in the "Garden of the Gods" in Colorado, which is full of won- derful, wave worn rocks of red sand- stone. They look as if a sea had re- treated and left them there. There is precisely the same effect in the Ilissus. 22 The anatomical forms have the sink and sag that suggest a wave worn rock. A print does not show it as a cast does. He looks as though water had washed over him for centuries. There is nothing of this in the Theseus, which is tense and strong and full of nerve and power. In the clash of one soul upon another soul, or in the meeting which is no clash but a "solution sweet/' so much is evolved of whose existence we had no idea. "Why are we so like children and horses ; afraid of what we cannot under- stand? We cannot understand the sim- plest things and God surrounds our days with mysteries. 23 It is only much in life that I fear, at times. I fear nothing in love or in death; they are holy twins. The one great, living fact, the blessed reality is Love — over, above, and be- yond, all else. Life and death are illu- sions and chimeras in its presence. It is God's one Fact. One most vital cause, among many others, why we have no great master- pieces of the human form, is because the opportunities to study it are so limited. Climate, our complex civilization, the extreme rarity of high beauty combined with equally high intelligence and refine- ment, have all helped to this result. It is no doubt useless to speak of blame or 24 remedy; but the fact remains, and with it, its inevitable results. One direct result of this want of op- portunity is want of appreciation. Every year we grow more keen and truthful in literary and musical appre- hension and criticism. The reason is plain ; the opportunities are constant for forming a true sense of the beautiful in these things. We absorb the elements of it in the air that we breathe — we may live in it if we will. In the great art of landscape painting the opportunities to study are world wide. Eyes alone are necessary. The hills and the sea, the plain and the stars, may not be hidden away and revealed alone at the price of so much an hour, and then with an imputation cast upon their immortal glory and purity. He who 25 steeps his soul in their beauties does so with a freedom as wide and deep as their own. He pays the price, it is true. But it is the price that beauty must always exact — of worshiping patience, of ly- ing in wait for moods of surpassing but evanescent beauty. The price of intense work and intense idleness. Understand me. The great- est artist, be he poet, sculptor, painter, or musician, is the man — or woman — who lives most and feels most : — the man — or woman — whose mental, spiritual, and physical organization is so exquisite, that he seems to have a thousand pores where others have one, by which to ab- sorb, and a thousand nerves by which to enjoy life, as he gathers it from the ele- ments about him. "Were it not for the irresistible, posi- 26 tive necessity of creating which alter- nately comes to such an one, he could remain passive, motionless, dumb, for whole periods of time — outwardly and apparently — but in reality silently ab- sorbed in an intensity of living : — thought, emotion, delight, pain, exquis- ite realizations, surging through him; borne in upon his soul by every breath of nature. Such are the silence and inertia of genius; this the "intense idleness" of which I spoke — until there floods in the tide of creation. The world understands the action, but seldom the idleness; whereas, in truth, the one exhausts the vital forces fully as much as the other. But such an one alone finds the re- ward. Upon such a worshiper alone does Nature flash the magnificent storms of 27 her deep heart — or, in the hush, reveal the tender mysteries of her beauty. And shall beauty in its highest man- ifestation — the human form — be less exacting and less coy than beauty in this great dumb Nature about us? Do not dream it. The pen falters in any attempt to express this — the deep- est, central thought of all art. The ground is too holy for common treading. But when the time comes — and the man — " whose eyes are his soul ; ' ' who, with bared head and unshod feet, shall pass behind the veil ; who shall gaze with reverent eyes upon God man- ifest in His glorious temple of the flesh ; then we shall have art. To him, few words will be possible; but when, emerging from the cloud that veils the divine, he lifts his hand to the dumb clay, shall it not give answer to 28 the great passion of dumbness which grapples it; and, springing into life un- der his touch, render immortal, the im- mortal conception of such a moment? But such can only be the works of free men — free in the highest sense of the word — that of full harmony with the deep forces of Nature, whose law is obedience. Not the freedom of riotous convulsion, but the freedom of the tender leaf, that trembles with delicate life amid the tremendous but perfectly balanced forces above it, below it, and within it. So only may they be free "to track suggestion to her inmost cell." So only — the whole man being flung into the crucible of art; for he can re- serve nothing — so only, through the blood red and purple deeps of all knowl- edge and all experience, he shall pass, 29 step by step, until to him it is given to combine them all into the smiting white ray of a purity, an innocence, and a truth, ineffable. And what will he prove? That, "Love strikes higher with his lambent flame, Than art can pile the faggots." With the Greeks — as it must be with us — the human form was the basis of all art. To them, what was not human was not divine. Here lies a deep well of truth, and these are some of the hints of God which art can give us. In nature, in all life, human or other- wise, no two corresponding parts are precisely similar. No two leaves are alike ; the two sides of the same leaf are not alike. Faces 30 are not alike; the same face has differ- ences on the corresponding sides; no right hand is the facsimile of its fellow ; it is the same with the two halves of the body. The law of Nature is unending diver- sity in the midst of regularity; a mul- titude of varying details grasped and held in perfect harmony by the central idea. The mind may follow out this analogy to the bounds of thought. As this is God's law in nature, it must be the law in Art, or Art will fail. It is only by studying truth of pro- portion that perfection is reached either in life or in art; and the material per- fection is ever suggesting a correspond- ing spiritual perfection. True grandeur is always found in 31 faultless proportions, and great effects may be obtained with very simple means. The intense love of form, the desire to embody it in lasting materials, is per- haps the strongest expression that can be found of the human desire to have and to hold. To the true sculptor, nothing is with- out form or void. All that he knows or dreams of beauty; all that he believes of goodness and of God, surges within him towards an outward expression in form, and until it is fixed before his eyes in tangible shape he cannot rest. This is God's own way of working. "We do not read that He primarily cre- ated music or poetry or any of the arts, but we do read that He created first of all — form — and that the image of it was His own. 32 Such high warrant, then, may the noble art of sculpture claim; that its burning and dominant impulse is a spark of that which created the visible universe; and let the sculptor and his work be reverenced accordingly. It asks nothing of the ages that roll by ; it has no need. Simplicity, cast like a transparent veil over profundity of insight is its everlast- ing garb. Nations may vanish and the face of the world be changed ; but the statue and the poem remain, to be cherished while the race survives. The power which the noblest sculpture possesses over the human sensibilities may be traced readily to its sources. Humanity is weak, full of effort and insufficiency. Art, to be art, must strike a note above and beyond all this ; it must 33 show something of God — or it is not art. It must show strength, with unmeas- ured capacity for action ; but this capac- ity must be in repose ; we want no effort, but a belief that the force is more than equal to its work. From this strength and repose, will most naturally arise dignity and sweet- ness; for, where the supremacy is un- doubted, there can be no fear to disturb and no jealousy to distort. Simplicity will follow as naturally as morning fol- lows the sun, for, with the elimination of all contradictory elements, all diverg- ent peculiarities, the work is relieved of embarrassments and proceeds with a sin- gle intention to its end. "If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light." Ideal beauty is thus largely defined by 34 negations and attained only by thorough self-restraint and conscientiousness. The moral strength and purity which it can- not but express under these conditions will be seen at once; and the influence for good of what is called "high art" affords the only measure of the influence for evil that is exercised by a vicious and degraded art. The dignity which sculpture possesses to those who are thoroughly imbued with its spirit and love is beyond expression. Its utter sincerity and truth ; its scorn of difficulties and shams; the narrow path it is compelled to tread in choice of subject and treatment of that subject; the difficulties of material which must be overcome ; and the weight of the artistic vision — which is at times too exhausting for flesh to endure — render it an art to be peculiarly reverenced. 35 We need no personal details in the history of Phidias, for by his works we know him. He must have been a man who had mastered generally, and with a profound knowledge of principles, the learning of the Greeks. His spirit must have been equal to and kindred with that of Homer ; for by the lines of his chisel he expressed ma- terially the beauty and majesty which Homer presented to the mind alone. He must have been a man of purity and uprightness of life, or the purity and severity of his work would have been impossible; he must have been sincere, for not a sham nor a trick is to be found in anything that bears the mark of his hand; and the utter self-abnegation of his art will be appreciated when it is remembered that to him and his co- 36 workers it was not permitted to inscribe their names upon the statues of the im- mortal gods, which were the work of their hands. Where such inscriptions exist they are supposed to be of later date. Finally, he stamped his age and his art with a standard of perfection to which the succeeding generations must bring their work as to a tribunal. Think a moment; he lived and died twenty-four centuries ago, and the works that he left have never been equalled or approached by any other man. Is not that a fame which can truly be called immortal? It is far easier to find a flaw than to appreciate a beauty, and the latter re- quires more refinement of knowledge and more sincerity of soul. 37 Any one can criticise ; few can appre- ciate. The highest art and the highest life can both be more nearly approximated by steady contemplation of the heights which are to be gained than by too much searching into the pits that are to be avoided. As we find in architecture that the most perfect results are obtained with the least waste of material, and that per- fection is reached only when nothing can be added and nothing can be taken away without harm done to the whole — thus uniting perfect economy with perfect richness — the moral aspect of the study will begin to dawn upon us. When we find that strength and sim- plicity, with evident directness of pur- pose must be the foundation upon which 38 is laid beautiful ornamentation, this mor- ality of art will deepen its impression. And when we find that weakness of purpose, over-profuseness of ornamenta- tion, falseness to the requirements of material, are always sure signs of decay, we can understand how vicious bad art may be. And in these signs may be read, as in an open book, the moral temper of a nation. It will gradually grow clear how all the arts are governed essentially by the same principle of truth, purity, and ex- act adaptation of means to ends. And when the mind is full of the ex- amples with which this study overflows of the exactions of great art, viz : sever- est truth, plainest purpose, most rigid economy; and when we see these made the handmaidens of perfect beauty ; and 39 together achieving that perfect balance, that exquisite poise to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken away, we shall not need to ask what is the use of studying the his- tory and principles and spirit of true art. You will not need that any one should tell you what you may see for yourselves, that the arts are so many different av- enues for the expression of that part of man's nature which takes hold upon and demands as its right, the things that are unseen and eternal; and by raising us above the actualities of life give us the best grasp upon those very actualities. You will see how by much training in these superb studies the mind is raised and habituated to what is strong, pure, and beautiful. How with this training the mind, and 40 heart, and even physical sense, grow in- stinctively to reject whatever is weak, degraded and ugly. Therefore, instead of resulting in a want of practicality, it subserves the highest wants of our nature. From all this you will see that this study is not one for entertainment only, but one that cannot be apprehended at all unless the most serious and earnest attention is given to it. You will see that men of genius — artists — work, not for the diversion, nor even the instruction of others, but sim- ply because they must give expression to so much of God as dwells within them ; knowing that those who have eyes will see, those that have ears will hear, and those that have feet will follow. Eemembering all this you will never make the mistake of looking upon art as 41 a toy and a diversion merely — as a fringe upon the garment of life — but instead, you will appreciate that it is composed of threads that are the very warp and woof of all truest, noblest, and highest living; and that it can only be apprehended from this entirely serious point of view. 42 DEC « ' r^K:, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 021 227 996 1