This week's entry into the Spoonflower fabric of the week contest is a variation of the Greek Goddesses print I submitted for the Handrawn contest. The theme for the contest this week is Greek Myths so I was pleased to already have a design I could translate into an entry. This design is multi-directional which is more practical for some applications. I hope you can find time to vote this week.
Showing posts with label Persephone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Persephone. Show all posts
Friday, May 17, 2013
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Greek Goddess Fabric Design

It all started with a couple recent Greek Goddess themed ATC swaps for at Swap-bot.com. I found I enjoyed researching the subjects of the swap and creating images. When I was a girl, one of my favorite books was filled with the myths of Greece and Rome. It was a book printed in the late 1800s and must have had a lot of fairly contemporary artwork for the time. The black and white pictures (glued into the book) included sculptures and paintings which included many of the Romantic painters, as well as many Neo-Classical masterpieces. This book was not the classic Bullfinch's Mythology that I had seen in the school library but a similar book, Myths of Greece and Rome by H A Guerber published in 1893. I just loved the stories and the art. It has been many years since I last saw that book and so I had forgotten a lot of the stories I once knew. Rereading the backgrounds on the Goddess has been really interesting.
I have drawn upon comic book art, pinups and the artwork of Alphonse Mucha for the inspiration. For example, my Medusa was inspired by a Alphonse Mucha calendar I have. Her pose is after the dancer in Mucha's La Danse. Mucha is an Art Nouveau artist who was basically a pin up artist with flair.

Medusa was originally a daughter of water deities but in later myths Medusa began life as a beautiful priestess of Athena who was turned into a snake creature when she had sex with Poseidon in the temple. The snake was a very powerful symbol in ancient times. The snake was seen as an animal from underground because of its appearance after hibernation but also because the snakes would slip underground before earthquakes. This underground connection tied snakes symbolically to prophecy and they were kept in the Temples to Apollo, the God of prophecy. The snake's habit of shedding its skin was representative of renewal and it's phallic shape was not lost on the ancients making it a symbol of sexuality. In many ancient mythologies the snake was also the symbol of the Chaos that the world was drawn from and was thought to surround the world still. Slaying Medusa can be thought in terms of civilizing the chaotic and restoring order.
* My periodic notice all images created by me are copyright Penney Hughes and may only be used with permission.
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