Thursday, December 3, 2020

Small Things & Sky

 
Being a Collection of Such Things as Bring Contentment and Delight in Daily Life: Garden Birds; Lofty Skies; Patterned Snails and Cheerful Weeds.


This is my calendar for 2021. It will probably be my last calendar and it's not available for sale on my website, I've just made a few for gifts and for people who have bought them annually for the last while. All the images are available on my website as art prints and if you'd like to order them as cards just contact me.  Klee Paper is selling a wall-planner I designed & illustrated. You can order it on their website - if ordering just one or two, please phone them rather than placing the order via the website, as that's handier for them.

My own calendar is printed on 150gsm recycled paper (100% post-consumer waste) and bound with recycled yellow string, and packaged in cellulose plastic-alternative, which is biodegradable in municipal composting.



January: Dun Laoghaire Seascape
 
I saw this view from the rocks below the East Pier in Dun Laoghaire, looking across Scotsmans Bay to Sandycove, with Kish Bank Lighthouse far away on the horizon and small seagulls sailing quietly round the seaweed-covered rocks.
 
February: Blackbird and Winter Moth in Ivy

Blackbirds are one of the earliest of our hedgerow birds to breed,occasionally nesting as early as February. They often build their nests in ivy, which is also a good source of food for them in winter.The male Winter Moth flies from October to February. The female Winter Moth has tiny wings and is flightless.
 
March: Long-Tailed Tit & Brimstone Butterfly on Blackthorn Blossom

The Brimstone Butterfly is one of the earliest butterflies on the wing, as it hibernates in ivy. Long-Tailed Tits make their elaborate nests in the thick of thorny bushes like blackthorn and gorse. They are tiny birds often in flocks, and at night they gather together for warmth. They are unusual in that they help to feed each other's baby chicks.

April: Dandelions
 
A sunny morning in late Spring, with glorious weeds like dandelions, red deadnettles, forget-me-nots and sun spurge filling the garden with colour and extending invitations to jewel-like hover-flies and richly-patterned garden snails

May: Spring
 
Loosely based on a view of the Wicklow Mountains from the green beside my house. I love the large sky and watching dogs run about wagging their tails and greeting each other, and kindly bringing their owners out for fresh air and introducing them to their neighbours.


June: Wren and Ringlet Butterfly

The Wren is a tiny bird that hunts through hedgerows for insects and their larvae. Usually solitary, in very cold weather it will huddle with other wrens, forming a feathery bundle with tails sticking outwards. Ringlet Butterflies fly June to August, and feed on the nectar of brambles among other flowers. Their dark colouring helps them to remain warm so they can fly on overcast days. Like many butterflies and moths, their caterpillars feed on wild grasses.
Also shown are Greater Stitchwort, Fumitory, Common Vetch, and Dandelion. The Brown-Lipped Snail varies from yellow to striped humbug colours; it generally munches only on dead foliage and can be considered the friend of gardeners.
 
July: Vetches & Trefoils
 
A bunch of flowers from the Pea Family. The pink spires of Sainfoin were a traditional forage crop, while the fluffy heads of Hares-foot Clover can be found among sand dunes. Birds-foot Trefoil, Bush Vetch and Tufted Vetch are more easily found, often making dreary waysides beautiful in late summer. White Clover and Red Clover are commoner still, and were once called honeysuckles because they are so rich in nectar.

  

August: Poppy Field
 
A summer meadow filled with poppies, white clover, thistle and buttercups. I drew this thinking of the archetypal lazy summer's day, when time stretches out and we find ourselves watching the progress of ants. We notice the way grass is not green, but maned with silver and beige and soft rose. On days like this it's always luxurious to have a sleepy plan to explore, which we may or may not fulfil. So there's a green hill rising in the distance with an oak tree at its crown and a horse to greet, should we decide to wander that way. 
 
September: Oak
 
Pendunculate Oak Acorn; Acorn Cup Gall; Oak Marble Gall; Pendunculate Oak Leaf;
Holm Oak Acorn; Empty Acorn Cups; Black Stone Flower Lichen; Oak Moss; Maritime Sunburst LichenRough-Stalked Feather-Moss - Sporophyte & Clump; Oak Twig;
Turkey Oak Leaf; Knopper Gall; Turkey Oak Acorns and Acorn Cup
 
Collected in the Phoenix Park, Dublin 

October: Yellowhammer
 
The Yellowhammer is a beautiful golden and chestnut bird which has become rarer in recent years. It breeds in hedgerows throughout summer and into September. Although its main food is seeds and insects, it also enjoys blackberries. The Herald Moth flies in Autumn and Spring, andhibernates between. Garden Spiders, also called Orb-Weavers for their wonderful webs, are conspicuous in Autumn. When spinning a new webthey eat the old one for protein!
 
November: Crow Hill
 
Based on the hill that greets the eye on entering the Phoenix Park near the Magazine Fort. I drew this while listening to Harlan Ellison reading Ursula le Guin's 'A Wizard of Earthsea', so the landscape became for me one of magic and poetry.
 
December: Winter Afternoon
 
The light can be so strange on winter afternoons, it almost seems to quieten everything, as though the heavy yellow rays are slowing and muffling sound.

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

A Calendarful of Crows

For my 2010 calendar I chose the theme of crows.


Why crows?

Well the first spark was a conversation I had with someone who didn't like crows, and didn't really see how anyone could.

I think crows are beautiful, and I think their beauty is especially charming because it's so easily overlooked it is almost secret. The romantics in us respond to this - that's why there are so many stories in which ostensibly plain heroines are revealed as belles. The next time you see a black crow, sidle up to it and take a long look at its plumage. To the lazy eye, it is a simple black, but to you, it flickers with the colours of the Aurora Borealis. Blue, petrol green, purple and sometimes a dark, members-only-password-at-door-jazz-bar red.



I found a strange book in the Ilac Library in Dublin, which made many outlandish but very probably true claims about corvids. As a result I drew a number of characters, all of whom shared some trait with a member of the crow family or referred to them in some way.


This Crow Man is campaigning for an end to the slanderous terms 'a murder of crows' and 'an unkindness of ravens'.

This drawing referenced the way that ravens will add to their nest each year, sometimes resulting in giant twiggy tree-mansions.

This crow-character is engaged in the strange habit of anting.

This one is demonstrating the crow's talent for problem-solving.


I actually can't remember what this one was - I think it's something to do with the way crows fly about at dusk.
 

This was in reference to the fine plumage of the crow family.


Ravens flirt by hopping up and down.

The thieving habit of jays.

A mysterious hooded crow.
 
This referred to a record of an American crow who would search for food while riding on the back of a pig.
 

 
The magpie love of glimmering, sparkling things.
 




Some sketches.