Lilith was Adam's first wife and demanded equality. When it was refused, she fled. Adam’s tribe dragged her back and killed her children in front of her one by one. This act turned Lilith from the repressed female into what some call a “demon”. She went wild.
This archetype represents the woman repressed, unhinged, and once out of the darkness, the woman who steps into who she really is. Lilith beckons us to come to terms with our own shadows and invites us to be ourselves without apology.
Her appearance marks the beginning of my story building goddesses. She was timely in my life as I was struggling from being out of alignment with my own true nature at that time. She began as “Divine Woman” (inspired by John Shook’s Divine Man) but during her build she presented as Lilith. During her construction I left my job as Senior Designer at the Mellow Mushroom corporation and began sculpting a new life.
Lilith stands over 12 feet tall and is the most primitive to date of the series. She is made from wisteria vine, sweet birch, oak, pine, cedar, a deer skull, and ram horns. She is both fierce and compassionate, calling all that look upon her to experience their truth, both the dark and the light.