SMITHS, SINGERS AND SHAPESHIFTERS: CELTIC ART OF THE BRITISH ISLES

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SMITHS, SINGERS AND SHAPESHIFTERS: CELTIC ART OF THE BRITISH ISLES Wandsworth shield boss Great nations write their biographies in three manuscripts: the book of their deeds, the book of their words and the book of their art [and] the only quite trustworthy one is the last. [John Ruskin] Celtic Art is one of the most beautiful and complex manifestations of human response to natural forms. Concerned with the decoration of a wide range of objects from drinking flagons and weapons to the covers of sacred books, the rhythmical energy and shifting, sometimes near-abstract forms represent an expression of concepts and beliefs as well as a functional response to the shape and use of the object to be decorated. The lecture concentrates on the particular development of the Celtic style in the British Isles, where it survived long after the coming of Rome had extinguished it elsewhere. Starting around 300BCE with the earliest examples of a distinctively British and British-made design, we will explore the interaction of pure Celtic ideas and techniques with elements drawn from Roman, Pictish and eventually Anglo-Saxon cultures, culminating in the great flowering of the 7th century AD sponsored by the Celtic Christian Church. [Celtic Art] is full of contrasts... full of paradoxes, restless, puzzlingly ambiguous [Paul Jacobsthal, Early Celtic Art 1944]

FURTHER READING: The literature on all aspects of Celtic art, life and society is vast and at times contradictory. These are some of the most interesting and/or relevant books; all should be available in libraries, from Amazon or both. Those marked * I would recommend as essential reading to anyone interested, others are more specialised. All have extensive bibliographies of their own for the truly obsessed! George Bain Celtic Art: the Methods of Construction 1996 [Constable] John Collis Celts: Origins, Myths and Inventions 2003 [The History Press] *Barry Cunliffe The Celts: A Very Short Introduction 2003 [Oxford University Press] *Julia Farley & Fraser Hunter (eds) Celts: Art and Identity 2015 [British Museum] Duncan Garrow & Chris Gosden Technologies of Enchantment?: Exploring Celtic Art 2012 [Oxford University Press] Miranda Green Celtic Art: Reading the Messages 1996 [Everyman Art Library] *D.W. Harding The Archaeology of Celtic Art 2007 [Routledge] *John Haywood & Barry Cunliffe The Historical Atlas of the Celtic World 2001 [Thames & Hudson] *Lloyd & Jennifer Laing Art of the Celts 1992 [Thames & Hudson (World of Art series)] B. Maier (transl. C. Edwards) Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture 1997 [Stüttgart] *Ruth & Vincent Megaw Celtic Art: from its beginnings to the Book of Kells 2001 (revised edition) [Thames & Hudson] Felix Müller Art of the Celts: 700BC-700AD 2009 [Mercatorfonds, Brussels] Barry Raftery Pagan Celtic Ireland: The Enigma of the Irish Iron Age 1997 [Thames & Hudson] Alice Roberts The Celts: Search for a Civilisation 2015 [Heron Books] *Ian Stead Celtic Art in Britain before the Roman Conquest 1996 [British Museum] In addition the DVD of the BBC s 2015 series The Celts: Blood, Iron and Sacrifice by Alice Roberts and Neil Oliver s series is available on Amazon. SLIDES: Slide 1: Battersea Shield 350-50 BC (bronze, glass) [British Museum] Carpet page from the Book of Durrow 650-700 AD (vellum) [Trinity College Library, Dublin]

Slide 2: New lamps for old Changes in interpretation of linguistic-based Celtic migration studies Map 1: Outward spread of language and art from Central European homeland c.1989-92 Map 2: Eastward spread from Atlantic seaways (Spain, Ireland, Western France and Britain) c.2010-14 Slide 3: Barbarian heroes The Deal Warrior 200-150 BC (skull with bronze headband or crown ) [British Museum] Double-headed plaque from Tal-y-Llyn hoard c.47-78 AD (brass) The Dying Gaul 50-150 AD (marble, copy of Greek bronze original, late 3rd century BC) [Capitoline Museum, Rome] Slide 4: Great twisted golden necklaces Clevedon torc terminal 150-50 BC (gold) [British Museum] Snettisham Great Torc c.75 BC (gold, silver & copper) [British Museum] Snettisham Grotesque or Marriage Torc c.75 BC (gold, silver & copper) [British Museum] Slide 5: High-spirited and quick for battle Hammersmith sword and scabbard c.300 BC (iron) [British Museum] Llyn Cerrig Bach plaque 200 BC - 100 AD (bronze) Kirkburn sword and scabbard 300-200 BC (iron, bronze, glass, horn) [British Museum] River Thames spearhead 200-50 BC (iron, bronze) [British Museum] Slide 6: Insular design Wandsworth shield boss c.300 BC (bronze) [British Museum] Torrs pony cap 300-200 BC (bronze) [National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh] Pony bit from Attymon, Co. Galway 50-150 AD (bronze) [National Museum of Ireland, Dublin]

Slide 7: Given to the river? Witham shield c.300 BC (bronze, coral) [British Museum] Orlando Jewitt Drawing of the Witham shield for John Kemble s Horae Ferales 1863 [British Museum] Battersea shield upper roundel (comparative detail; see Slide 1) Slide 8: Mirror, mirror St Keverne Mirror 120-80 BC (bronze) [British Museum] Aston Mirror 50 BC - 50 AD (bronze [British Museum] Birdlip Mirror 50 BC - 50 AD (bronze) [Gloucester City Museum] Desborough Mirror 50 BC - 50 AD (bronze) [British Museum] Slide 9: Through the looking glass Holcombe Mirror 50 BC - 70 AD (bronze) [British Museum] Slide 10: Through a glass darkly Old Warden Mirror c.70 BC - 50 AD (bronze) [The Higgins Art Gallery & Museum, Bedford] Slide 11: Cheshire Cat Style Battersea shield: detail of central boss (see Slide 1) Stanwick Hoard: mounting for harness or bucket 75-50 BC (copper alloy) [British Museum] Snowdon bowl 0-50 AD (bronze, glass enamel) Dragonesque brooch c.50-150 AD (bronze, enamel) [British Museum]

Slide 12: Expanding horizons Staffordshire Moorlands (Ilam) pan c.200 AD (bronze, polychrome enamel) [British Museum] Sutton Hoo hanging bowl c.600 AD (bronze, silver, gold, niello, enamel, millefiori glass) [British Museum] Slide 13: Brooches of gold having crystal inserted in them Tara brooch c.700 AD (silver-gilt, gold filigree, glass, enamel, amber) [National Museum of Ireland, Dublin] Hunterston brooch c.700 AD (silver, gold, amber) [National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh] Slide 14: Triskele to Trinity Lagore belt buckle 700-750 AD (bronze) [National Museum of Ireland, Dublin] Moylough belt shrine c.700 AD (bronze, silver, leather, glass, enamel) [National Museum of Ireland] Ardagh Chalice c.700-750 AD (silver, gold, glass, amber, enamel) [National Museum of Ireland] Slide 15: The work of Angels Book of Kells: Chi-Rho monogram c.800 AD (vellum) [Trinity College Library, Dublin] Lindisfarne Gospels: Gospel of St Luke, initial letter 700 AD (vellum) [British Library] Slide 16: Celtic Revival Brian Boru s Harp (Trinity College Harp) 1350-1450 (wire-strung cedar wood with brass pins) [Trinity College Library, Dublin] Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres The Dream of Ossian 1813 (oil on canvas) [Musée Ingres, Montaubon] George Waterhouse & Co. Tara Brooch replica advertisement 1851 [V&A]

Slide 17: Men s souls and the universe are indestructible George Henry & Edward Atkinson Hornel The Druids: Bringing in the Mistletoe 1890 (oil on canvas) [National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh] Authentic Celtic tattoo 2015 Slide 18: Anything is possible in the fabulous Celtic twilight Capel Garmon firedog c.50 BC - 50 AD (iron) Slide 19: They use few words and speak in riddles hinting at things and leaving a great deal to be understood Aylesford bucket 75-25 BC (bronze, iron, wood) [British Museum] Snettisham Hoard L in situ 1990