This Rebel Alliance symbol from Star Wars will doubtless be recognizable to many. A Celtic version was a unique request from someone who joyously embraces his inner Geek, and now has fully externalized it. Since I stopped watching TV before it appeared, I'd never heard if it; so it was something I had to Google up in Image Search. Just now when I tried to get more information so I could describe just WHO the Rebel Alliance were I found pages of links to fanboy obsessions, more than I could sift through. So I'll leave it that I fulfilled a strange assignment to the satisfaction of the client.
Stag, Salmon, and Goose Celtic Tattoos
The dispersing Celts, the diaspora of the Irish in particular to the far-flung corners of the globe, has long been referred to as "The Wild Geese." As a result the image of the goose has been a favorite one in Celtic art, as in this design copied from a charming 1920's silver brooch.
A second piece that is part of the leg with the goose in the previous posting. This salmon is a simplification of a design originally drawn by the esteemed Welsh artist Jen Delyth whose popular images make splendid tattoos. We have had a handshake agreement for decades by which I am honored to replicate her designs as tattoos and pay royalties, and with this image I have reached the milestone of 1500 images for sale online. 28 of them started life as a piece drawn by Jen. Translating the work of others into tattoos is always a challenge, crediting the original artist as well as serving the aesthetics of the client.
The third animal that completed the Celtic animal themed leg on a woman from the East Coast, whose decade living in Ireland left her with a yearning to reconnect with that faraway homeland. This is another design adapted from art by the Welsh artist Jen Delyth. Her stag is more complex, with knotwork I could not hope to replicate at this size, so the stag is softened and simplified, with internal spirals and one triquetra replacing woven knots. In each of these views a maelstrom of La Tene style double and triple spirals, rendered in three colors, binds the creatures together into one whole that covers the calf of the leg. Having the animals rendered in black line and dots brings them to the foreground, and the colored spirals are done in dotted lines of pure color to form a background matrix.
Journey Cross
A Celtic high cross is the timeless choice when people think of a Celtic tattoo. I encourage my clients to get something custom, to make each design their own, so this lad put me through my paces by selecting the knot work pattern from one cross, the shape of another, and then choosing a glyph based on the Jerusalem cross worn by pilgrims to be the center point. They all tied together nicely, and he wears it proudly on his forearm.
A high cross tattoo that combines the beauty of traditional Celtic knot work and the holy symbol of one who has made the pilgrimage to Jerusalem as its center point. For a seeker, a wanderer, and for one who has found The Way.
Santorini Swallows
Nothing pleases me more than the opportunity to bring ancient art to life again in skin. These birds are from a fresco in Akrotiri, Santorini, known as the Minoan Pompeii. A Bronze Age civilization on the island then called Thera was destroyed by a massive volcanic eruption in 1600BC, and some speculation says that this was the origin of the Atlantis story. They lived in beautiful homes with walls covered with fabulous decorations, and a room painted with spring lilies and birds has been carefully preserved in the National Archeological Museum. These birds fly again on a shapely leg.