Sadak in Search of the Waters of Oblivion

October 5, 2020

English painter, John Martin’s, Sadak in Search of the Waters of Oblivion (1812), depicts hope in the face of insurmountable odds.

Within a dramatic landscape of craggy mountain tops, the Persian nobleman, Sadak, pulls himself onto a precipice, as shafts of light relieve the intense red glow pervading the scene, forecasting his successful quest.

John Martin’s Sadak in Search of the Waters of Oblivion (1812) could be seen as a metaphor of the struggle the Christian Sexual Addict faces within the modern culture-a culture well practiced in the commodification of sex to sell anything from oatmeal to cars. In the face of insurmountable odds there is hope.

This painting came to me in a most unusual way. I had just lost a job, and I was feeling really dejected. I went to my “happy place,” the Saint Louis Art Museum. I go there for escape.

I was standing in front of this painting by John Martin, when a woman came up, and stood beside me. I didn’t say anything. We both stood in front of the painting admiring it. Then she spoke, “This was my son’s favorite painting. He died in a bicycle accident in France. He would often say that the painting was a metaphor of life. That Sadak’s position is were we find ourselves many times in life.” I could so relate, because that is where I was. I could totally identify.

We talked a little more about our favorite paintings in the museum. She said her cordial goodbye, and was gone.

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