Showing posts with label dog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dog. Show all posts

Sunday, January 1, 2023

Celtic Man Petting Dog

 

Here's another Celtic knot, which means I've only got half a dozen more to go before finishing my Coloring book.  I hope to finish it either this year or next year, I think that would be super.

Happy new year!  :)

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Dog-Bird-Plant-Snek!


 I've been wanting to do a design for a long time where there's a dog a plant a bird and a snake all tied into each other where each one is tied up with the other three and I finally managed it!

I did another design back in 2020 that also had all four elements as you see here:


And its very good, however the bird and snake don't directly tie in with the dog or man.  It does have a human however which my new one doesn't so now I need to work on one with all five elements: man, dog, bird, snake, and plant all directly intertwined, preferably with some spirals, geometric and key patterns as well.  That would be the holy grail!

Saturday, July 6, 2019

Domini Canis - Color!



I just did a color version with brush pens, and its brown because the dog next to Saint Dominic is often brown.  And then I put it in grayscale because black and white is the Dominican color scheme! :)

Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Domini Canis


St. Dominic is often pictured, or sculpted, with a dog beside him with a flaming torch in its mouth. This derives from the tradition that before his birth his mother had a dream where a dog leapt from her womb carrying a burning torch in its mouth and set the world on fire.

What it means of course is setting the world on fire with the Holy Spirit, which Saint Dominic certainly did with his preaching, and writing, and founding the Dominicans, who continue to be awesome like that.

This is my attempt at a Celtic version of this popular motif.  Of course I’m absurdly happy with it.  :D

The dog’s pose and leg tangle are from the Book of Kells originally, although I was looking at it on page 113 of George Bain’s excellent Celtic Art The Methods of Construction.

I hope you like it and would like to wish you all a happy 4th of July!     (whether you celebrate that sort of thing or not), and if you celebrate with fireworks, please don't set too much of the world on actual fire!  :)