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Velvet-Dragon — The Escape

Published: 2010-10-31 17:40:21 +0000 UTC; Views: 871; Favourites: 20; Downloads: 15
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Description Original artwork is for sale. Please email redeye@designbyredeye.com with inquiries or visit www.lynnetteshelley.com to view more of my artwork and artwork sales.

You may also want to view The Chase , which is another artwork of mine on the same subject matter. (You can view it in my portfolio)

“The Escape”
Mixed Media on Paper
(liquid gold leaf, oil pastels, ink marker, colored pencils, gold paint pen on Canson paper).

As I really enjoyed working on the subject matter for my commissioned artwork The Chase , I decided to make a larger piece on the same theme.

For those who missed the background story on The Chase, here it is again:

This artwork is inspired by the old Irish tale of the daughter of the High King. She was a beautiful woman but of free spirit and no man could court her. Her father the King decided that at the next Beltaine, that the first man who could catch her (as she was well-known for being an excellent runner) would be her husband. The daughter went to a wise woman and asked for a potion to make her as fleet as a hare. However, the wise woman was either getting deaf in the ear, or was a trickster, for when the girl drank the potion before the race, she turned into a hare. She was then chased by her father’s greyhounds, and being terrified, she ran into the woods, where she was caught in a trap. A huntsman came to check his snares and instead of a meal, he found the princess. The King was true his word, and he married them; the huntsman being handsome, the princess found that being married to him was not so bad a thing.

In this new version I am trying to emphasize the sexual undertones to the original story, with the lily appearing to both symbolize innocence and chastity as per tradition, however, in other cultures the lily represents sexuality. Itook some liberties with the lily and made it a kind of stylized hybrid between a lily and an anthurium, which has a very interesting shape!

The vines in this image are also symbolic to the Celts and is a theme used in their artworks. The meaning is connection and eternity. Vines also often grow in a shape of a spiral, which, to the Celt represents growth, renewal, energy, life etc.
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Comments: 4

joeyv7 [2010-11-05 18:56:57 +0000 UTC]

Beautiful work. And I appreciated your comments too, they added to the piece

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Velvet-Dragon In reply to joeyv7 [2010-11-19 01:08:19 +0000 UTC]

Thanks Joey.
There's tons of really cool folktales out there, so there's no shortage of inspiration

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

ZaeavYeelell [2010-11-01 00:51:56 +0000 UTC]

I really appreciate the care you've taken with detail and symbolism here, especially the way you've worked spirals into every part of the figures, not just for their meaning, but also to emphasize the figure's component shapes.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Velvet-Dragon In reply to ZaeavYeelell [2010-11-02 15:29:29 +0000 UTC]

Thanks. Glad you like it! I appreciate you stopping by to comment

👍: 0 ⏩: 0