Tuesday, 2 February 2016

The call of the sea

Periodically throughout the year I am suddenly all-consumed by thoughts of the ocean. Not only does the coast call to me, but all I seem to want to watch, read and look at are programmes, films, artworks and stories of the sea.

And so it is that I've been soaking up every episode of Coast I can lay my eyes on! Luckily, this programme is on television almost every day in the UK (for readers overseas, I wonder if you can view it online?), but of course that hasn't been enough for me! I've been scouring the internet looking for documentaries and films that pique my interest.

Undoubtedly my best discovery is the animated film, Song of the Sea, directed by Tomm Moore. I've watched it three times in two weeks, and I honestly can't believe I'd not heard of it before now! For those who, like me, have been unaware of its existence, or perhaps just haven't got around to watching it yet, I cannot recommend it enough. I was mesmerised from the very beginning, and reduced to tears of wonder by the end. Ocean myth brought to life in the most perfect way. If you like Tomm Moore's style, you may also enjoy The Secret of Kells.

Craving more selkies (about which there seem to be disappointingly few films and documentaries), I also watched Ondine, directed by Neil Jordan, which I thoroughly enjoyed, and an old favourite, The Secret of Roan Inish, directed by John Sayles.

Already a fan of the music of Kevin Kendle, which I find particularly relaxing and inspiring when writing, I was delighted to discover that he had made an album with Llewellyn called Journey to Atlantis. An intriguing, relaxing and imagination-capturing journey of discovery under the sea.


The sea has inspired countless artists, all with their own take on the atmosphere, jagged coastline, crashing waves, wide horizons, wildlife and myth. My favourites are undoubtedly Annie Hudson, Josephine Wall, Victor Nizovtsev and John William Waterhouse, whose work is pictured throughout this blog post.


Finally, it's time for a trip to the coast my mind has been so occupied with!
 



Featured paintings: Call of the Sea by Josephine Wall; The Mermaid by John William Waterhouse; Sea Cave by Annie Hudson; Promise by Victor Nizovtsev

Tuesday, 22 December 2015

Season's wishes to all!

The Winter Solstice has arrived, and with it a quick note from me to wish everyone a very happy Yuletide, Christmas and New Year.

I hope the end of the year brings with it family time, fun, peace and the promise of renewal, awakening and longer days to come!

Featured painting: Winter's Dream by Amanda Clark

Friday, 18 December 2015

A winter's journey of art and fairy tales

Last week I finally embarked on a long-desired visit to the Obsidian Gallery in Stoke Mandeville, Buckinghamshire, lured by the promise of fairy tales and dragons at the two newest exhibitions.






Unphased by an inconveniently broken car (ok, maybe a little bit phased), I hopped on a train to my sister's house, from which her fully operational car would carry us both to this magical wonderland of art.

And we were not disappointed...

Within the walls of what looks like a farm shop on the outside, we entered a light, welcoming space where every wall, cabinet and shelf is filled with paintings, drawings, papercuts, sculpture, jewellery and other objects.

Our eyes instantly sought out the work of our favourite artists who are exhibiting there - Jesa Marshall (more on her jewellery soon!), Amanda Clark, Tamsin Abbott and Jackie Morris - before we began to make new discoveries.

Ed Org's drawings and paintings, such as The Green Man's Lament; Mel Chambers' ceramic tiles; Flora McLachlan's etchings and watercolours; and Heidi Vilkman's papercuts were among the hundreds of captivating creations.





But without doubt the pieces that had the most impact on me on this occasion were the tree paintings of Mark Duffin.

Using acrylic with gold and silver leaf and crystals he achieves such delicacy, such luminescence, such ethereal magic. The kind of paintings you can find yourself lost in for a moment, slightly mesmerised, but calm - and full of wonder at what lies outside the boundaries of the canvas.



I left the gallery with a beaming smile, and with Covenant carefully wrapped and tucked safely under my arm, with its firey reds, oranges and golds, crescent moon and sleeping dragon entwined in tree and earth.


The Winter Fairy Tales and 'Ere be Dragons exhibitions are on at the Obsidian Gallery until 31 December - so there's still time to share in the magic!

Featured artwork: Hidden Forest by Heidi Vilkman; Arch Dragonfly Tile - "Every New Day" by Mel Chambers; Winter, The Green Man's Lament by Ed Org; By Owl-light by Flora McLachlan; Journey by Heidi Vilkman; Regal by Mark Duffin; Snow Tree by Mark Duffin; Blessing by Mark Duffin; Covenant by Mark Duffin

Monday, 2 November 2015

Where magick lives...

I've just received the latest issue of The Magical Times, in which appears my first article for the magazine! It features comments from artist and illustrator Marc Potts, jewellery designer Jesa Marshall, writer and artist Jackie Morris and musician Cyoakha Grace.

Do head to the website to order your copy if you haven't already. This issue is packed full of inspiration!

Saturday, 10 October 2015

The Green Lady: a folk tale discovery


I've just finished reading a wonderful book called Norfolk Folk Tales by the mesmerising story-teller Hugh Lupton, in which I discovered a story that was entirely new to me (so many folk tales, after all, are familiar to us, in some form or other).

The Green Lady is a story attributed to Norfolk because of certain words of local dialect, and is said to have been told by a 95-year-old Norfolk woman, but it is given no particular setting or place in time. Dark, vivid and surreal, it is full of fascinating and intriguing characters.

Over to Hugh Lupton for his retelling of the tale...

Once upon a time there lived a poor old man who had three daughters. One day the eldest daughter said: "Father, give me a cake and a bottle of water so that I can go and seek my fortune."

Her father gave her what she asked for and she set off along the road. After a while she met a little old man who asked her: "Where are you going?"
"To seek service."
"Give me your cake and water, then walk 'til you see a house with a green door. Knock and you'll find fortune... though whether for good or ill I cannot tell."
The girl replied: "The road is long, my legs ain't strong. I'll keep my cake and water."

She walked for a long time, eating and drinking as she went, until she came to the house with a green door. She knocked at the door. Out came a lady who was green from head to foot. Her hair, her face, her dress, her hands, and her feet were as green as leaves, and her two eyes as green and sharp as emeralds.
"What do you want?"
"I've come seeking service."
"What can you do?"
The girl made a dob (curtsey). "I can bake and I can brew, and I can make an Irish stew."
"Very well, I'll take you on, but on two conditions: you must neither look up the chimney nor inside the clock-case of the grandfather clock.
The girl agreed and they went inside. That night, she slept in front of the fire. The next morning she was up at the crack of dawn, cleaning and washing the hearth. As she was working, the green lady's daughter came down the stairs. She was as green as her mother and she was riding a black cat.
"Be so kind as to cut me a slice of bread and spread some butter on it."
The girl turned. "Can't you see I'm scrubbing the hearthstone?"
"Then you'll scrub no longer!"
She called upstairs, and her mother came riding down with a chopper in her hand. With one swing of it the girl's head was cut clean from her shoulders. The green daughter hung the head in the chimney, and her mother put the body in the clock-case of the grandfather clock.

Some little while later, the second daughter set off to seek her fortune with a cake and a bottle of water. She met the little old man and all happened as before: "The road is long, my legs ain't strong. I'll keep my cake and water."
When she came to the house with the green door she made a dob: "I can bake and I can brew, and I can make an Irish stew."
The green lady took her on with the same two conditions. The next morning the girl was up at the crack of dawn, cleaning and washing the doorstep. Down came the green daughter on her black cat.
"Be so kind as to cut me a slice of bread and spread some butter on it."
"Can't you see I'm scrubbing the doorstep?"
"Then you'll scrub no longer!"
Down came the green lady with a chopper in her hand, and with one swing of it the girl's head was cut clean from her shoulders. The head was hung in the chimney, and the body in the clock.

Well, weeks and months passed. Then, one day, the younger daughter set off to seek her fortune. After she'd walked for a while she met the little old man: "Where are you going?"
"To seek service."
"Give me your cake and water, then walk 'til you see a house with a green door. Knock and you'll find your fortune... though whether for good or ill I cannot tell."
The girl replied: "The road is long, my legs are strong. Please take my bread and water."
She walked for a long time, her belly aching with hunger, until she came to the house with a green door: out came the lady, green as leaves and her eyes as sharp as emeralds.
"What do you want?"
"I've come seeking service."
"What can you do?"
She made a dob. "I can bake and I can brew, and I can make an Irish stew."
"Very well, I'll take you on, but on two conditions, you must neither look up the chimney, nor inside the clock-case of the grandfather clock."
The third daughter said neither yes nor no, but followed the green lady into the house. That night she slept in front of the fire. The next morning she was up at the crack of dawn, cleaning and washing the oven. Down came the green lady's daughter: "Be so kind as to cut me a slice of bread and spread some butter on it."
The girl jumped to her feet and fetched a loaf from the cupboard. She sliced and buttered it, and gave it to the green daughter. The daughter was delighted. She called to her mother, and all three of them sat at the table and ate their fill... and as for the girl, she ate and ate until her aching belly ached no longer.

That afternoon, when the oven had been cleaned spotless, the green lady said: "You stay and mind the house; we're going out for a ride."
The two black cats were saddled and bridled, and the green lady and her daughter rode away across the green fields and into the green woods.
As soon as they were gone, the girl ran to the chimney and looked upwards. There, she saw the heads of her two sisters hanging by their hair. She reached and took them down. She sat with them cradled in her lap. She combed their hair and washed the soot from their cheeks with her tears.
Then she looked in the clock-case of the grandfather clock. There, she saw her sisters' bodies. She pulled them out and laid them on the ground. She straightened the fold and creases of their skirts and blouses. Then she put their heads to their shoulders. And the skin of their necks melted and melded, and their eyes winked and blinked, and each of them drew in a breath of air.
"Where have we been?"
"Never mind that," said the third daughter. "Quick! Come with me."
She took their hands and they ran out into the garden. They ran past apple and pear trees until they came to a clump of gooseberry bushes. The girl called out:

"Hide us hide us
So that they won't find us
If they do they'll break our bones
And bury us under the marble stones."

They dived in among the bushes, and not one thorn pierced them. They were only just in time. The green lady and her daughter came riding up to the house. They opened the door.
"Be so kind as to cut us a slice of bread and spread some butter on it."
But there was no answer. They looked here and there. The girl was gone. They looked up the chimney and inside the clock. Her sisters were gone. They shrieked with fury. They seized their choppers and leapt onto the backs of the two black cats.

First they asked the apple trees: "Where did they go?"
But the apple trees wouldn't answer, so they chopped them down.
Then they asked the pear trees: "Where did they go?"
But the pear trees wouldn't answer, so they chopped them down.
Then they came to the gooseberry patch. "Which way did they go?"
And one gooseberry bush said: "This way and that way and hither and yon."
And another gooseberry bush said: "And on and over the river."
So they rode out of the garden to the river's edge, and they whipped the black cats into the water... but down they sank and the water closed over them. The green lady and her daughter were drowned.

As for the three sisters, they crawled out from under the gooseberry bushes, went to the house, lifted the latch and opened the door. They searched downstairs and upstairs, they peered into chests and cupboards... and they found gold enough to last them the rest of their days.
So they lived happy, and so may we, let's put on the kettle and have a cup of tea.

Excerpt from Norfolk Folk Tales by Hugh Lupton, available on Amazon, but try your local independent bookshop first!

Green door photo: Eirian Evans
Featured painting: Spirit of the Forest by Josephine Wall
Gooseberry bush photo: kahvikisu

Tuesday, 22 September 2015

Jewellery for the imagination

Jewellery is one of my main passions in life, and I'm always on the lookout for great craftsmanship and original designs that speak directly to me as a reflection of my interests, personality and imagination. And so it was that I ventured forth to London for the annual International Jewellery London (IJL) exhibition to seek out some new inspiration.

Bathed in light under the Victorian barrel-vaulted glass roof of the main hall at the Olympia conference centre, around 520 stands showcased the latest jewellery designs and designers. Among them were the stands of big name brands, gemstone suppliers, timepiece manufacturers, new graduates and smaller independent designers. Excitedly, I set about my mission...

First to jump out at me were the silver and gold spinning rings of Solo Line, and I spoke briefly to the designer Yossef Naor who had travelled from Romania for the event. She highlighted the many different styles and combinations of materials that were available in the range, including stones such as opal. I especially liked the hammered surface of the rings, which added texture and an almost rustic effect - as well, of course, as the wonderful spinning elements.

Moving on, I discovered the delightful designs of Katie Stone, who brings a cuteness and whimsicality to her work. Leaping hares, inquisitive badgers, slithering snails and wandering foxes, among other creatures, hide behind locket doors and beneath moons and stars, while foraging birds leave footprints around silver bands. These designs cannot fail to paint a big beaming smile across one's face, and Katie's love of nature simply oozes out of every handcrafted piece of silver. Perfect for all of us who share her passion.


Similarly inspired by the natural world is Sonya Bennett, who, having established her first workshop in 1998, has become one of the UK's leading designers of contemporary precious jewellery. Drawing upon botanical and other natural forms, either observed first-hand or drawn from other sources such as 18th-century Japanese illustrations and Romantic and Pre-Raphaelite paintings, her collections include 'Ferns and Fritillaries', 'Harvest', 'Fox and Bluebells', 'Acorn' and the nautical-themed 'An Ode to Septimus'. My favourite is this Springtime pendant with golden bird - a year-round reminder of the freshness and beauty of this season of rebirth.


Kate Gilliland looks to the opposite end of nature's spectrum, and presents a dark yet beautiful study of death. She was instantly inspired by the claws of a female blackbird that she found lying on a path in Leicester during her time at university, and cleverly cast them in precious metal as a memorialisation of the bird's life. To find such beauty in death is a skill that few possess, as it requires us to think deeply about our own mortality, so I was especially impressed by Kate's ability not only to look beyond harsh realities, but to create such evocative pieces of jewellery that capture the fragility and miraculousness of life.



Alan Ardiff also seeks to convey this miraculousness, albeit through a very different design style - his work reminds us of the fun, frolics and motion of life. The pendants and earrings he creates feature a variety of motifs, including animals, flowers and hearts; some even contain little scenes, such as my favourite piece (I think!), the New Day pendant, pictured here. But his trademark is undoubtedly the kineticism he often adds to his designs - hares leap, butterflies dance and stars move across the heavens as the wearer turns her head from side to side.

I asked Alan where he draws his inspiration from. "Imagination is key," he replied. "Each person gets to enjoy my pieces from where they take them to in their imagination, and each New Day brings time for further dreaming - for me in the west of Ireland."

Some colour, next, as I arrived at the stand of Hazel Atkinson, whose work I have long admired - and whose earrings I often wear! Indeed, for bold, kaleidoscopic wearable art, one need look no further than Hazel's distinctive jewellery collections. She spent many years evolving and perfecting her technique of hand-printing and dying anodised aluminim to achieve the stunning results we see today, such as the new Royal Flush range in regal purple. "Fitting for a queen!" she enthused.


Continuing on the theme of anodisation, Prism Design works in titanium and has just unveiled its new Woodland Collection of necklaces and earrings, which feature feathers, butterflies, dragonflies and flowers in pulsatingly vivid hues of purple, blue, turquoise and yellow. These are colours that I rarely ever see in jewellery, and they really are spellbindingly magical.


Last, but by no means least, I of all people could not fail to be smitten by the moon designs I spotted at the show. Daisy London's sterling silver and gold vermeil Sun + Moon collection, inspired by the physical and emotional connections associated with these heavenly bodies, includes a rather mystical mother of pearl necklace, which is reversible (see photo at the start of this blog post).

Meanwhile, Muru's Talisman range features symbolic motifs to reflect one's beliefs and to provide empowerment. In the case of the moon designs, we're reminded of female power and intuition, and to always follow our hearts.

Wednesday, 16 September 2015

Place & Space: an exhibition

Just a quick note to highlight a wonderful exhibition that is currently showing at the Espacio Gallery in London's Shoreditch.

Place & Space features the work of Annie Hudson, which I discussed in a previous blog post, as well as that of several other artists inspired by the shifting landscape around us.

If you're in the area over the next few days, do stop by!