Mihailo Macar Here
When the poet returned a year later, Mihailo was gone. The church was empty except for the pieces he had left behind. They were not statues in any traditional sense. They were geometries—spheres that were not quite round, cubes with one side soft as flesh, pillars that leaned as if exhausted. And in the center of the nave, where the altar had once stood, was his final work.
The city was horrified. Then confused. Then, slowly, awed. They called it The Mother of All Things . Critics wrote that Macar had not carved the stone but had listened to it. They used words like “brutalist” and “expressionist,” but Mihailo knew those were just cages. He had simply removed what was not the woman. mihailo macar
He did not mind. The stone had never cared for politics. He retreated to a derelict church on the edge of Gradina, a roofless, wind-scoured ruin. There, he found a vein of black marble in the foundation—a dense, unforgiving material that other sculptors avoided. It was too hard, they said. Too dark. It showed no shadow. When the poet returned a year later, Mihailo was gone
No one knows where Mihailo Macar went after the ruined church. Some say he walked back to the mountain of his birth, stripped naked, and lay down in the quarry until the lichen covered him. Some say he crossed the sea in a fishing boat and became a stonemason in a village where no one asked questions. Some say he never left the church at all, that he simply turned himself into the last, smallest carving—a pebble of black marble with a single, perfect thumbprint pressed into it. They were geometries—spheres that were not quite round,
He did not carve. He unlocked .
Mihailo would take the chisel, but he never made useful things. He found a fallen piece of soft sandstone, the color of a fading bruise, and he began to pick at it. He didn’t carve into it so much as he carved away from it. For three days, he worked in silence, his small hands bleeding, his eyes unfocused. When he was done, he held up a small, smooth form: a woman with no face, her body curved like a river bend, her arms fused to her sides.