Thread: Today/Tomorrow is the Feast of Bealtaine. It is one of the four major Celtic ancient feasts, the others are Samhain, Imbolc & Lughnasadh. It’s also considered the first day of Summer in Gaelic Ireland & Scotland. Let’s examine this 2500y old tradition! #MayDay
The Feast name ‘Bealtaine’ is believed to be etymologically derived from the Irish words for ‘bright fire’. Thus the most significant part of this ceremony were the fires that were lit. It is also known as the Sun Fire Festival (Celtic Idol, Boa Island)
Here’s an overview of my own artwork. It’s inspired by the natural & subconscious worlds & draws on my background in science & study of Early Medieval history:
Bealtaine marks an important part of the farming season as this was the day when cattle were brought from winter grazing to the summer uplands. The Irish practised Transhumance from at least 2,000 years ago. (Book of Kells, 800AD) [photo from irisharchaeology.ie ]
Just as a note, I’ve used publicly available or my own photos to illustrate this educational thread. If any of these belong to you, I am happy to delete or acknowledge.
The cleansing element was to protect the herds from disease. Hiberno-Celtic livelihood was reliant on cattle for wealth & indeed much of the ancient mythology centres on ‘cattle raids’ - the most famed being The Táin Bó Cúailnge (Setanta Wall, Dublin by Desmond Kinney)
Bonfires were the ritual cleansing aspect of the celebration. Flames were brought home & used to light the family fire & tapers (an early form of candle) as part of the ceremony. Even the ash of the fire had magic properties. (Orpen, Cottage Interior)
Two fires were lit by the Celtic Druids & the cattle were walked between them to cleanse them, before they were taken to the uplands. Transhumance (seasonal movement of animals) is known as Booleying in Ireland. (Native Kerry Black Bull: it is an ancient Irish breed)
Booleying also meant that cowherds would live with the animals in the uplands where they could milk & guard them from rustlers & wolves. These cattle folds were termed Buaile. The system mostly died out under Colonial occupation.
To head out to the summer grass was known as to ‘Buail an bóthar’ or ‘Hit the Road’ for thousands of years. This Irish idiom is now ubiquitous & was best expressed by Ray Charles in ‘Hit the Road Jack’ (1961)
As with Samhain (a feast that the Church appropriated as Halloween) acknowledgements were required to the ancient gods, so offerings of food & drink were left outside. As the gods were replaced, the tradition continued with gifts to the ‘Little People’.
Another aspect of Bealtaine was the May Bush. This practise is more common in the Hiberno-Norman areas (Wexford, Clare & Kilkenny). A hawthorn was chosen & decorated with red ribbons & eggs. Here is the ritual fertility aspect. Additionally the thorn is a common sacred tree.
Danaher, the folklorist, recorded an updated version where hurling balls (sliotar) were hung on the May Bush & then distributed to winners of hurling matches. No wonder Irish people love Christmas Trees!
In Hiberno-Celtic culture the gods were associated with trees, mountains, wells & rivers. Thus the May Bush with its offerings & the visiting of Sacred, (later) Holy, Wells. A distant echo is the Irish Catholic Church practise of ‘patterns’ today.
Patterns (Deasil) visited graveyards in specific order on certain Sundays. Older versions included visiting a Sacred Well & walking around it a certain number of times in a clockwise direction. This is a folk memory of pre-Christian practise & recognition of the god of the well.
Ceremonies relating to Bealtaine were widely practised until the 1950s. A haemorrhaging rural population, emigration & the growth of cities meant some traditions were lost. With the decline of the de facto theocracy of the 20th C Irish people are celebrating them again.
A key site for Bealtaine is the Hill of Uisneach. It has long been seen as the centre of Ireland. Fires were set there on Bealtaine. Once lit, a responding fire was lit on the Hill of Tara & then on every sacred mountain of the island in response.
Uisneach was the site in Irish mythology where the goddess Éiru was promised that the Island would be named for her & so the correct name for the land is Éire & this is in the Constitution of Ireland & recognised by the UN. She is buried on the Hill under the Cat Stone (Pic)
.@UisneachFire celebrates the event (I’ve borrowed some of their great images for this thread). Check out their website. The High Kings of Ireland were said to marry Éiru at Uisneach. The site is also associated with the great god Lugh.
We know from Scotland (where the Gaelic Irish gave the country its name & colonised the West Coast) that there were foods associated with the feast. Such records are rare in Ireland, as a result of an tOcras Mór (1845-9) when 1-1.5m people died in the Great Famine.
Here’s more on my own artwork - you can identify the shapes & proportions of ancient Irish art in my ink on paper drawings
Irish Anti-LGBT+ hate crimes almost doubled from 2021 to 2022
73 crimes were reported in 2021 & this increased to 135 in 2022
▪️LGBT+ hate crimes rose by 85%
Anti-Gender hate crimes, as reported, decreased slightly from 30 to 25 reported incidents, a drop of 5 reports or 17%. The number of incidents is significant given that Trans & NB ppl represent less than 1% of the population.
Drawing gives me incredible comfort & reduces anxiety. I think you get out what you put in. I use ideas from my study of nature & history to create my ink on paper drawings. I hope that my work gives comfort to others. See what you think of the works in this thread.
Visit Etsy to see all my available drawings that you can purchase right now: etsy.com/ie/shop/robboh…
The Rabbit & the Moon (2023) | Original ink on paper drawing by Robert Bohan
Buy here: etsy.me/3HjesP4
It’s important to me that art is accessible. I think it’s a good thing that kids live with original art in their home - & that they are inspired by it. And by humour!
Irish Cob Pony (2023) | Original ink on paper drawing by Robert Bohan
Buy here: etsy.me/3LB8U51
Thread: Adolph von Menzel (1815-1905) was one of the greatest European artists in history. His enormous capacity for description, his empathy with his subjects & his fertility of expression make him one of my favourite German painters
Here I’d like to just take you on a wander thru this mostly self-taught artist’s drawings & paintings. He is an enormously sympathetic describer of his time. He drew himself too! Here are his hands (1864 & 1848)
Here’s an overview of my own work. I think, like von Menzel, that it’s important for an artist to have an insatiable curiosity. See what you think:
I like to use the colours of the spectrum. Here’s the idea of a human. First there’s the face you see. But then there are the rainbow colour sensory forms. Each person is different, based on the experience & favouring of those forms. Here’s some more drawings to consider
Visit Etsy to see all my available drawings that you can purchase right now: etsy.com/ie/shop/robboh…
The Rabbit & the Moon (2023) | Original ink on paper drawing by Robert Bohan
Buy here: etsy.me/3HjesP4
It’s important to me that art is accessible. I think it’s a good thing that kids live with original art in their home - & that they are inspired by it. And by humour!
Irish Cob Pony (2023) | Original ink on paper drawing by Robert Bohan
Buy here: etsy.me/3LB8U51
On this day in 1945 one of history’s most depraved & evil people killed himself. His hatreds & Far Right vision led to the Holocaust, & WWII that spread around the world. Some 45 million civilians & 15m combatants were dead by its end*.
The numbers killed are still debated with some countries probably having more deaths than those they reported. You can see the source I used here: nationalww2museum.org/students-teach…
The Holocaust has been described as the worst crime of the 20th C. Hitler & his henchmen sought to wipe out several groups for racial or social reasons. The tolls for those marked* are still being researched.