Posts Tagged With: trip to Ireland

Paint, sketch & photograph in the Irish landscape

DSCF5625This is the latest update to the Wild Atlantic Tour (see details under “Tours”), which will be held in October 2015. We have added some interesting artistic and creative options, so that people who are interested can enjoy this component as we travel the Irish coast. Your leader Joan Slack, who is also an artist and avid photographer, will make sure we stop often and have time to capture the wild Irish seashore, mountains and rugged cliffs.

One of the participants in the tour, Dennis Robertson, is a painter, and will be taking many opportunities to do on-site watercolors. while he won’t be teaching, he welcomes others to join him in capturing the land through painting and sketching.

Denny graduated from Michigan State University, with a degree in Landscape Architecture in 1967, where hetook a required course in watercolor painting. Since then his interest in art has lead him, along with his wife Sue and family, to form Dillman’s Creative Arts Foundation, Lac du Flambeau, Wi. www.dillmans.com in 1978.The Foundation has brought internationally known instructors to northern Wisconsin to teach workshops in watercolor,oil, pastel, and many other topics.  Over 11,000 students have traveled to this  family lakeside  resort setting in the last 38 years. Denny enjoys painting along with some of the workshops when he has time. More often he is able to find time to paint when the classes are held off premise while the northern Wisconsin resort is taking a winter hiatus. They have hosted workshops in Bora Bora, cruises to many Caribbean Islands, Bermuda, Greece, Cuba, Costa Rica, several trips and travels from Paris and out of Rome.Traveling to Ireland has been a long time goal.

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Categories: Ireland | Tags: , , , , , , ,

Some background on Irish High Crosses

 A bit about Irish Crosses

The cross and the dragon: the pagan roots of Irish crosses

Venceslas Kruta, an expert on Celtic art and civilization, explains the symbolism that underpins the Celtic cross

Monumental cross of Muiredach, Monasterboice, Co Louth. Photograph: John DonnellanMonumental cross of Muiredach, Monasterboice, Co Louth. Photograph: John Donnellan

So Celtic art can give the impression of being the artistic expression of all the peoples speaking the Celtic language. But the art of the ancient Celts was the result of a very long search for image-based expression, and the ideas common to the Celts since their origins vary according to the context. Venceslas Kruta, author of a new book, Celtic Art, explains its origins.

We see a lot of crosses and dragons in Celtic art – what do they have in common?

At first glance, very little. However, the Celts believed they were fundamental elements of a system, complex but consistent, which expressed their understanding of the universal order. The starting point is the notion of centre, a crucial concept for ancient Celts. It is here that the cosmic axis is supposedly found, imagined as a tree, preferably oak carrying mistletoe, whose branches support the canopy of heaven and the roots joining the underground world. It thus linked together three superimposed worlds: the Heavens, the Earth of the humans and the Underground world.

The representation of a world defined as four parts linked by a centre is one of the most frequent themes in Celtic art, isn’t it?

Yes, since the fifth century BC. Its simplest shape, a circle and a cross superimposed, is thus depicted on flat spoons most probably used for a ritual purpose, many of which have been found in Ireland. Their midpoint is sometimes pierced, suggesting their use during libations. This association of a cross, indicating the four major directions, and a circle, symbolising the limits of the territory that surrounds the central point, not only has a spatial value, but also a temporal one. The space defined by the journey of the sun and time can indeed not be separated: the four arms of the cross refer to the four daily events of the sun: from sunrise to sunset, including zenith and its equivalent underneath the horizon, but also the yearly events: solstices and equinoxes.

And what’s with the dragons?

The emblem of the pair of dragons, present on the Continent since the sixth century BC, decorated mostly weapons, especially sword scabbards of warriors in the fourth and third century BC. According to an account of the Welsh Mabinogi, such dragons would have been found on Excalibur, the legendary sword of King Arthur. The fight between the two dragons is figured in a most meaningful way on the cover/top of a remarkable artefact, the ceremonial jug from Brno, a masterpiece of Celtic art associated with the beginning of the bright season, the Beltane festival. It represents in a suggestive way most of the constellations that dominated in about 280BC the night sky on the day of this festival, as well as the one for both solstices and the Samain feast, beginning of the dark season.

What other images were there?

Several monuments have been discovered which marked the supposed place of the world axis, different for each community. This type of monument, known as their Greek name omphalos (umbilicus), has the shape of a pillar with decoration on each of its four faces. The most ancient one – the Pfalzfeld pillar in Rhineland, from the fifth century BC – and the most recent one – the Irish pillar of Turoe (Co Galway), probably from the first century BC – illustrate the evolution of this concept: from the representation of the divinity face wearing the mistletoe leaves, repeated on each side, to different images on each side, even maybe evocations of areas of the canopy of heaven that correspond to the four cardinal directions.

So this was about the Celts trying to impose some kind of order on their world?

The ancient Celts’ artworks are not made of borrowings or fortuitous inventions but are the expression of an extremely structured system of their idea of a universal order and its spatial and temporal understanding. Its dynamical aspect is fundamental. Its roots are ancient ones and its general elements are common to both continental and insular Celtic people. Those elements are one of the basis of their cultural unity.

And, finally, where does the Irish Christian cross come into all this?

The ultimate step of its symbolic representation is the Irish Christian cross, on which the pattern is arranged vertically. The Christ figure is in the centre – it has thus become the axis that links the heavenly, terrestrial and infernal worlds. However, on some of the crosses, solar patterns are depicted in place of the Christ. Even the pair of dragons can be found on some of them, which are supposed to have their annual fight. Such is the case of a cross of Gallen Priory (Co Offaly), where dragons coil up around a giratory pattern, a sort of curvilinear swastika, or on a Dromiskin cross (Co Louth). This confirms that the specific shape of the Irish cross is the result of a reuse of the old Image of the World in the Christian iconography. None of this is unusual, since the meaning of origin was fully compatible with the Christian doctrine. In Ireland, the image has thus been treated the same way texts from the traditional literature have been, turned away from their most obvious pagan aspects, and customised with a Christian aspect to best serve the new religion.

Venceslas Kruta is one of the world’s leading experts on Celtic art and civilisation and author of Celtic Art (Phaidon)

I am posting this thanks to an article in the Irish Times

Categories: Ireland | Tags: , ,

The Artistry of The Book of Kells

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One cannot help but be amazed at the intricacy, artistry, and beauty of the illuminated manuscripts in the exhibit at Trinity College. Several illustrated books of psalms and gospels are displayed, and on my tours in Ireland I always make it a point to guide people through the exhibit, pointing out the steps involved in bookbinding, mixing  pigments, calligraphy, and creating quill pens. The intricate Celtic knotwork designs, depictions of monks patiently transcribing, and the glorious hues of lapis lazuli, crimson and gold all create page after page of stunning artistry.

Some of the items created for personal adornment  or religious rituals echo the same design mastery as in these pieces:

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To read more about the Book of Kells see this link:

http://digitalcollections.tcd.ie/home/index.php?DRIS_ID=MS58_003v

 

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