There is a fascinating article on Medievalist.net. I am not sure I understand it but it points to a technique used by the Celtic monks that might well be worth cultivating.
Category Archives: News
Christmas Show
This is less a post than a question. I seem to be committed to taking part in a Christmas craft show. It is a local event organized by a bunch of Etsy sellers, so it will include jewellers, dressmakers etc. I have never done anything like this before and I find myself at a bit of a loss as to how best to display my stuff. I will be selling (or hoping to) mostly my Daily Paintings which are all very small, 4″X6″ to 8″X10″. I have dozens, maybe even hundreds, and I certainly don’t intend to frame them all. When I sell them through Etsy I sell them unframed. Should I try to set them out on a table, maybe on plate racks? Should I try to build some screens with ridges that the paintings can be propped on? Anyway, I will keep you posted on what I decide to do, but any suggestions would be most welcome.

Paperwhites

Who says you can’t grow paperwhites outside in Ontario? They look like paperwhites, they smell like paperwhites, I think they are paperwhites. I must have planted them by accident last year, there were a bunch of left-over bulbs in the shed that I thought I might as well throw in somewhere, and look what I got.
RIP Harold Pinter
British playwright and Nobel prize winner, Harold Pinter died on Christmas eve after a seven year battle with oesophagal cancer, he was 78.
Pinter’s work inspired a generation of dramatists and the adjective “Pinteresque” was coined to describe his hallmark style, depicting claustrophobic lives with a dialogue peppered with menacing pauses.
The son of a working-class Jewish London family, he was a conscientious objector who carried his ant-war principles to the end, using his 2005 Nobel acceptance speech as an opportunity to denounce the war in Iraq.
He is survived by his wife of nearly 30 years, Lady Antonia Frazer and a son by a former marriage, Daniel.
Pooh & Piglet update
Artdaily.org – The First Art Newspaper on the Net
Today, Sotheby’s London sold the finest single collection of E.H. Shepard’s original drawings for Winnie-the-Pooh books to have come on the market. The collection of Stanley J. Seeger & Christopher Cone realised the extraordinary total of £1,262,863 ($1,968,046), well in excess of the pre-sale high estimate for the sale (est. £648,900-931,500).
The top-selling lot in this afternoon’s sale was one of the most iconic and best loved illustrations of Pooh, ‘He went on tracking, and Piglet . . . ran after him’ and was extremely sought-after and contested for by more than four bidders in the saleroom and on the telephones. The illustration sold for the remarkable sum of £115,250 – more than double its pre-sale low estimate (est. £40,000-60,000) – establishing a new auction record for a drawing by E.H. Shepard.
The next highest price was for, ‘Bump, bump, bump – going up the stairs’, which sold for £97,250 and then “When Christopher Robin had nailed it on in its right place…”, which brought £73,25.
Oliver Postgate
Oliver Postgate, creator of Noggin the Nog and Bagpuss has died at the age of 83. You can read more in the obituary in The Independent
Housepaint, Phase 2: Shelter
This one looks good, I am a great admirer of street-art and this seems to be a natural marriage.
Artdaily.org – The First Art Newspaper on the Net
TORONTO.- On Saturday, December 13, 2008, the Institute for Contemporary Culture (ICC) at the Royal Ontario Museum presents Housepaint, Phase 2: Shelter, the first exhibition on the subject of street art in a major Canadian museum. Ten colourful canvas houses exuberantly painted by ten of Canada’s leading street artists draw attention to social problems of poverty and homelessness. In addition, over the course of the exhibition, five artists will respond to the previous installations by each creating a new work in the ICC’s Roloff Beny Gallery. Curated by Devon Ostrom of them.ca, Housepaint, Phase 2: Shelter will be on display until June 2009, when the canvas houses will be auctioned, with proceeds going to Habitat for Humanity Toronto, a charitable organization devoted to the elimination of poverty housing.
Pooh & Piglet
According to BibliOdyssey forty two original E.H. Shepard illustrations will be auctioned at Sotheby’s (New Bond Street, London) on 17th of December.
These are among my favourite illustrations of all time, matched only by my love of the stories they accompany. I spent many hours reading these stories to my children and never grew tired of Milne’s humour and beautiful language. It is hard to imagine the stories without these wonderful illustrations which inspired, but were never matched by, Disney.

This quote from peacay. He mentions on his blog that these images may be protected by copyright and that he will remove them if requested. As I have linked to him, they would then disappear from here too, ah well.
Ernest Howard Shepard (1879-1976) was born in London and encouraged to draw from a young age by his artist mother. He won a scholarship to the Royal Academy at the age of eighteen.
In the early years of the 20th century Shepard achieved some success with illustrated editions of Dickens and Aesop’s fables. By 1907, Punch Magazine had accepted some of his drawings for publication although he wasn’t a permanent Punch employee until 1921. He would remain there for more than thirty years.
In WWI, Shepard earned a Military Cross for bravery during service with the Royal Artillery in France and Belgium but he continued to sketch humorous vignettes which he submitted to Punch. In the 1920s, he was introduced to Alan (AA) Milne who reluctantly commissioned Shepard to do some line drawings for a children’s book he had written. And the rest, as they say, is history.
Shepard and Milne were never particularly close but their collaboration on the four books – ‘When We Were Very Young’ (1924); ‘Winnie the Pooh’ (1926); ‘Now We Are Six’ (1927) and ‘The House at Pooh Corner’ (1928) – ensured that their names would be associated for eternity. Characters included Christopher Robin, Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, Eeyore, Piglet, Owl, Rabbit and Kanga.
The character of Winnie the Pooh was based on Milne’s son’s (Christopher) teddy bear, but the drawings were inspired by a toy bear named Growler, belonging to Shepard’s own son. Growler would be mauled to death by a neighbour’s dog, but Christopher’s bear (and other stuffed Winnie the Pooh animals) circuitously made their way to the New York Public Library where I believe they still live. Late in life, Shepard was said to have voiced some resentment that the “silly old bear” had overshadowed his other illustration work, but he had expressed his fondness for the characters on many more occasions, so this phrase may have been more affectionate than has been reported*.
Although he pursued book and magazine illustration all through his life, Shepard’s most notable work, beyond the AA Milne quartet, were the line drawings he produced for Kenneth Grahame’s ‘The Wind in the Willows’, published in 1931.
Raphael’s Madonna of the Goldfinch

Madonna del Cardellino or Madonna of the Goldfinch, by Raphael, 107-centimetre by 77-centimetre oil-on-wood.
For the past ten years this beautiful painting has been undergoing painstaking restoration under the direction of Patrizia Riitano at Florence’s Opificio Delle Pietre Dure, a state-run lab. As well as extensive repairs, the painting has also been restored to its original vibrant colour by the removal of several layers of discoloured varnish.
Raphael, painted the panel as a wedding gift for Lorenzo Nasi. In 1547 the Nasi house collapsed and the work was broken into 17 pieces. As Raphael had died in 1520, another artist was commissioned to mend and restore it. He used nails to put it back together and painted over the cracks. It was also repaired several times during its time in the Medici collection.
It will be on public view in Florence, Italy,in the city’s Palazzo Medici before it is returned to the
Uffizi Gallery.
Full story on the CBC website
