
I used to shape clay and plaster pieces
Humble offerings to please the senses
An obvious output; physical forms
Showcasing creativity, skill
Made at the behest of secondary education
But another part, less known
Students of art learn to build plinths
Upon which to elevate their work
I would buy MDF
Cut it to size, mitre seamless edges
Sanded, painted, balanced and level
Hold my breath as plexiglass was scored and snapped
Beading adhesive with precision
So as not to mark its transparent surface
It was the boring precursor
Humble box hiding in the shadows of showy curves
Older, wiser; now I see power
Necessary work is laborious
Thinking, measuring (twice)
Braving a bandsaw for the first time
Entrusted with sharp blades
Coupled with an expectation
We would not lose a finger
Only we knew
Pedestals were made by our own hands
And now you know too
How many times have you built
The foundation upon which you stand
Aspired to a standard of excellence
Beyond your skill
Rising up to the occasion
Utilizing courage and determination
No one sees that side
They view your polished end product
Laissez-faire comments and shares
Scrolling past it a second later
Forgotten in a flash
Hands remember forever, slivers and callouses
(Permanently sticky fingers)
Fixing brad nails poking out of cheap wood
The frustration of trial and error, wasted time and materials
But it was never actually a loss
For we learned to fail
To rise up again and again
Making something no one would ever deign to notice
Except I do
At galleries, I admire beautiful compositions
Get lost in their exquisite detail
Disinterested pleasure freely offered for the taking
Yet I always look to see if the plinths hold up to scrutiny
Expert construction elicits a smile
For the nameless prism
Underneath breathtaking bronze
Famous artists do not build their own plinths
Still, they know a good one when they see it
Perhaps a plinth is an altar
(A trite comparison, assuredly)
The sturdy surface that supports ascension
Do the gods revel in its assemblage?
I dearly hope so
For if my small mind does
Then they too will surely know
What it means to make an earth
To hold up heaven
About the Creator
Aspen Marie
In love with life and all of its foibles.



Comments (2)
Oh my, this was absolutely sublime! I especially loved the last two lines!
Well-wrought! Hands remember forever, even after the bones turn to dust.