Anthony Sweat quoting Walter Rane on the Difficulty of portraying the translation process in art.

Date
2015
Type
Book
Source
Anthony Sweat
LDS
Hearsay
Scribed Verbatim
Direct
Reference

Anthony Sweat, “The Gift and Power of Art," in Michael Hubbard MacKay and Gerrit J. Dirkmaat. From Darkness unto Light: Joseph Smith’s Translation and Publication of the Book of Mormon (Provo and Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Company and BYU Religious Studies Center, 2015), 236-37

Scribe/Publisher
Deseret Book
People
Walter Rane, Joseph Smith, Jr., Anthony Sweat
Audience
General Public
PDF
PDF
Transcription

When I asked Walter Rane about creating an image of the translation with Joseph looking into a hat, he surprised me by telling me that the Church had actually talked to him a few times in the past about producing an image like that but that the projects fell by the wayside as other matters became more pressing. Note how Walter refers to the language of art as to why he never created the image:

At least twice I have been approached by the Church to do that scene [Joseph translating using the hat]. I get into it. When I do the drawings I think, “This is going to look really strange to people.” Culturally from our vantage point 200 years later it just looks odd. It probably won’t communicate what the Church wants to communicate. Instead of a person being inspired to translate ancient records it will just be,

“What’s going on there?” It will divert people’s attention. In both of those cases I remember being interested and intrigued when the commission was changed (often they [the Church] will just throw out ideas that disappear, not deliberately) but I thought just maybe I should still do it [the image of Joseph translating using the hat]. But some things just don’t work visually. It’s true of a lot of stories in the scriptures. That’s why we see some of the same things being done over and over and not others; some just don’t work visually.

BHR Staff Commentary

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