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Forced into prudence...
Lift up your heads... (very image-heavy post) 
11th-May-2008 12:08 am
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The weather has been so very warm these past few days here, it's curious that I should have unearthed this old, unfinished Christmas-themed project recently whilst rooting about for more watercolour paper.

This was to have been a full-colour illustration for a christmas card.  I remember very clearly that it was begun in the summer of 2003, the year of my graduation.  I was about to have some time on my hands, so I thought I'd do something fairly ambitious by my humble standards (the whole piece measures 35.5 x 51 cm - considerably larger than what I usually attempt for an illustration, as opposed to observational drawing).  In the event, Walker Books contacted me that summer, I got to retell and illustrate my first book and thus my yet sapling illustration career began.  I've been kept fairly busy ever since and this remained unfinished.  I thought I'd go back to it eventually and never did.  I don't think I shall now.  I think (I certainly hope) I've improved since, and after all, it's attained its own quiet nostalgia for being in the state it is.



Details:

The holy family.  Mary was inspired in large part by one of my favourite depictions of the Madonna (quite possibly my most favourite ever, in fact), Sassoferrato's Virgin In Prayer.  I was going to paint the bauble the cherub is dangling above the christ child as the globe.




Upper right, two visiting deities from the far East I wanted to include.  On the left is the bodhisattva Guan Yin of Mahayana Buddhism.  She is a bodhisattva of compassion - a goddess of mercy, if you will.  Less to do with Theravada Buddhism (although she does appear in the Buddhist tale of the Mahajanaka) and more to do with Thai mythology, is the Goddess Manee Mekhalaa (or simply Mekhalaa for short) on the right.




Lower right, a shepherd and the Magi.




A close up of the kings:




Just beyound the kings in the stable are pencil ghosts of the ass and ox.  Typically, I wanted to draw a Brahma bull...:




Just left of the family, a white hart, so frequently seen in paintings of the virgin and child from English and French schools of the early Renaissance.




On the left, a choir of angels sings Handel's Messiah...




...With Handel himself conducting.  I think they're just singing 'For unto us a child is born' (no, not the Alleluiah chorus).  The soprano angel at the front will sing 'I know that my redeemer liveth' later in part three...




Just above and slightly to the left of the family, Gabriel, inspired directly by Lippi's Annunciation.:



Five years ago. I was twenty two then... 

Goodnight!
Comments 
11th-May-2008 01:34 am (UTC)
But it's so beautiful. I love your little additions to the traditional scene. The way you explain them is so interesting. I enjoy hearing all of the little touches of yourself you put into it. As always your line-work is superb.
12th-May-2008 12:11 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much. I did enjoy those little unusual additions. As you say - it was a way of introducing something of myself and my interests into the scene. :)
11th-May-2008 01:45 am (UTC)
Anonymous
Oh, my. How wonderful. As always, I'm completely overwhelmed by the beauty of your drawing, but I also so much love the way you've incorporated so many things into the Nativity. Guan Yin and Handel! What a marvel!

Having grown up Christian but being Buddhist for the last 25 years, each year I set up a manger scene that includes many deities, but nothing prepared me for the beauty of this. Thanks.
11th-May-2008 01:48 am (UTC)
Me, sorry. Cleaned up my computer too well.
12th-May-2008 12:14 pm (UTC)
Hehe! :D
12th-May-2008 12:13 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much!

I enjoyed those personal touches very much. I'm so intrigued by your own Nativity set-up with its variety of deities. I never realized you were a Buddhist too - how lovely to learn that. :)
11th-May-2008 01:51 am (UTC)
Beautiful! And I think you are right, it holds its own just the way it is, I don't think it needs to be "finished".
12th-May-2008 12:16 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much! :D
11th-May-2008 01:57 am (UTC)
Every time you put up one of your drawings, I find myself saying, "I want one! I want one!"

My God, you're incredibly talented.
12th-May-2008 12:18 pm (UTC)
You're so kind - thank you so much! I do wish there was away in which you could have a copy. Please feel entirely free to save these for yourself - poor quality photographs though they are.
11th-May-2008 02:22 am (UTC)
The angels look so happy! Everything is beautiful. I love the leprechaun/shepherd! teehee!
12th-May-2008 12:20 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much!

Hehe, the shepherd is rather dwarf-like in appearance, though he's very much human. :D
11th-May-2008 02:24 am (UTC)
Love the detail
12th-May-2008 12:20 pm (UTC)
Thank you. :)
11th-May-2008 10:37 am (UTC)
Oh, these are amazing! I love how everyone there has his own character, like real people!
12th-May-2008 12:25 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much! I'm so glad that comes through. :D
11th-May-2008 03:31 pm (UTC)
Oh wow! I love all the detail in this, the clothing, the expressions, all very beautiful *_*

I especially love the three kings, and definately gets that spirit of Christmas feeling to come through <3
12th-May-2008 12:26 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much!
11th-May-2008 04:05 pm (UTC)
so divine.....I'm swooning :)
12th-May-2008 12:27 pm (UTC)
Aw, you're very kind. Thank you so much! :)
11th-May-2008 04:56 pm (UTC)
Wow, I am in awe! Absolutely gorgeous...and the details are amazing! Beautiful.
12th-May-2008 12:28 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much indeed. :D
11th-May-2008 08:07 pm (UTC)
Oh it's glorious! I love the way it's all thought out and the way you've explained it too, it's such an intriguing image it needs to be admired for a good amount of time to appreciate all of the different elements of it :D
12th-May-2008 12:30 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much! I enjoyed those personal touches, and it's so gratifying to know that they're appreciated. :D
12th-May-2008 05:13 pm (UTC)
Sooo very beautiful, and so much for the eyes to take in, so I really appreciate the detail shots! Out of everything, I especially adore the stag, the angel's wings and way you draw drapery the most...but it's all simply amazing!! O_o
12th-May-2008 05:41 pm (UTC)
Thank you so much! I'm really grateful people do care to see all the details.

This was five years ago, of course, and although it isn't terrible, I think I can draw the white hart much better now, but I'm very pleasd you like it all the same. :D
12th-May-2008 10:47 pm (UTC)
This is one of the most beautiful things I have ever seen! It is really incredible! I don't know if I can really put my feelings about it into worthy words, but I love how you combined figures from different regions, eras and faiths - I like to think this perhaps reaches the 'true' message, much more so than entirely 'westernised' visions of Jesus' birth.

And the inclusion of Handel himself is wonderful! While I adore all of 'Messaih', "For Unto Us a Child is Born" is one of my favourite pieces ever. Wonderful!
15th-May-2008 11:39 am (UTC)
Ah, thank you so much. It's so wonderful that details such as those are being picked up on and are appreciated. It's kind of you to think so well of it, old and unfinished though it is.

I'm glad my choice of what the angels are singing is in favour! :)
15th-May-2008 03:07 pm (UTC)
Nice userpic!
15th-May-2008 08:33 pm (UTC)
Ooooohhhhh !! Gorgeous! I lovelovelovelovelove how you included Guanyin and Mekhalaa! A second favorite is definitely Handel hehehe.. my god the details are insane...

Have you seen this? (Awful quality, I know, but it's so fabulous).
16th-May-2008 01:51 pm (UTC)
Oh, my word! Wonderful! That must have taken some choreographing! I saw a post in response to the video, apparently the dancers were deaf?

And thank you so much! I was sure you'd like seeing Guan Yin. :D
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