Mortuus Merula
I found this perfectly exquisite blackbird lying dead in an alleyway, so I made the ink drawings directly and quickly from the body onto separate sheets of paper. There are many wonderful folklore narratives woven around blackbirds and after reading various tales, imagining images and listening to its song, I drew my own stories about this beautiful bird by adding drawings of objects from my own collections alongside the original studies of the blackbird.
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Mortuus Merula 'Requiem'Mortuus Merula 'Requiem'Once I had made the drawings of the blackbird I buried him and some months later dug his skull and bones out of the earth. I drew the skull alongside the bird to preserve the memory of the life of this lovely creature. In this drawing, the dead blackbird is almost consumed by darkness but the 3 swallows (vintage wall ornaments) swoop down in tribute carrying flowers (made by my son in primary school for Mother's Day) and illuminate the body of blackbird.
h:66cms x w:74.5cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil and graphite on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Requiem'Mortuus Merula 'Requiem'Once I had made the drawings of the blackbird I buried him and some months later dug his skull and bones out of the earth. I drew the skull alongside the bird to preserve the memory of the life of this lovely creature. In this drawing, the dead blackbird is almost consumed by darkness but the 3 swallows (vintage wall ornaments) swoop down in tribute carrying flowers (made by my son in primary school for Mother's Day) and illuminate the body of blackbird.
h:66cms x w:74.5cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil and graphite on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Requiem'Mortuus Merula 'Requiem'Once I had made the drawings of the blackbird I buried him and some months later dug his skull and bones out of the earth. I drew the skull alongside the bird to preserve the memory of the life of this lovely creature. In this drawing, the dead blackbird is almost consumed by darkness but the 3 swallows (vintage wall ornaments) swoop down in tribute carrying flowers (made by my son in primary school for Mother's Day) and illuminate the body of blackbird.
h:66cms x w:74.5cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil and graphite on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Death of a Songbird'Mortuus Merula 'Death of a Songbird'To the right of the drawing lies the blackbird. I wanted to honour the beauty of the blackbird’s song so I have surrounded him with sources of music. I used my little childhood toy plastic songbird in a cage: the bird ‘sang’ if you moved the handle up and down. There is a yellow toy birdsong whistle and a vintage 50’s musical clockwork birdcage that plays birdsong while revolving and lighting up. Finally, there is an songbird (I think it is a Black Hooded Oriole, drawn from an antique taxidermy specimen) which flies free of any cage and pulls my childhood spinning musical tin toy behind it.
h:56.5cms x 71cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil and graphite on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Death of a Songbird'Mortuus Merula 'Death of a Songbird'To the right of the drawing lies the blackbird. I wanted to honour the beauty of the blackbird’s song so I have surrounded him with sources of music. I used my little childhood toy plastic songbird in a cage: the bird ‘sang’ if you moved the handle up and down. There is a yellow toy birdsong whistle and a vintage 50’s musical clockwork birdcage that plays birdsong while revolving and lighting up. Finally, there is an songbird (I think it is a Black Hooded Oriole, drawn from an antique taxidermy specimen) which flies free of any cage and pulls my childhood spinning musical tin toy behind it.
h:56.5cms x 71cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil and graphite on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Death of a Songbird'Mortuus Merula 'Death of a Songbird'To the right of the drawing lies the blackbird. I wanted to honour the beauty of the blackbird’s song so I have surrounded him with sources of music. I used my little childhood toy plastic songbird in a cage: the bird ‘sang’ if you moved the handle up and down. There is a yellow toy birdsong whistle and a vintage 50’s musical clockwork birdcage that plays birdsong while revolving and lighting up. Finally, there is an songbird (I think it is a Black Hooded Oriole, drawn from an antique taxidermy specimen) which flies free of any cage and pulls my childhood spinning musical tin toy behind it.
h:56.5cms x 71cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil and graphite on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Memento Mori'Mortuus Merula 'Memento Mori'I wanted to reference traditional Memento Mori imagery so I used my lovely Pelham Puppet Skeleton to gently hold the blackbird’s skull. When I dug the exquisite bones out of the soil I was struck by the startling contrast between the weightless delicacy of the skull and the heavy, coarsely textured dense mass of the earth.
h:72cms x 55cms (framed).
Ink and watercolour and acrylic and sand on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Memento Mori'Mortuus Merula 'Memento Mori'I wanted to reference traditional Memento Mori imagery so I used my lovely Pelham Puppet Skeleton to gently hold the blackbird’s skull. When I dug the exquisite bones out of the soil I was struck by the startling contrast between the weightless delicacy of the skull and the heavy, coarsely textured dense mass of the earth.
h:72cms x 55cms (framed).
Ink and watercolour and acrylic and sand on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Memento Mori'Mortuus Merula 'Memento Mori'I wanted to reference traditional Memento Mori imagery so I used my lovely Pelham Puppet Skeleton to gently hold the blackbird’s skull. When I dug the exquisite bones out of the soil I was struck by the startling contrast between the weightless delicacy of the skull and the heavy, coarsely textured dense mass of the earth.
h:72cms x 55cms (framed).
Ink and watercolour and acrylic and sand on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Sepultura'Mortuus Merula 'Sepultura'In this drawing about my imagined ideal burial of the blackbird I placed him where a garden of my beloved childhood toy 'Spears' Flowerplay flowers would grow from him. These little plastic flowers are from a kit where you could endlessly re-assemble many flower parts in different configurations. The plastic is so faded and brittle now I was moved by the idea of organic and inorganic longevity/brevity and decay/preservation.
h:66cms x w:80.5cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Salvation'Mortuus Merula 'Salvation'When I found the dead blackbird it looked perfect - it had only the tiniest drop of blood on its beak. Once I had drawn it on the white paper I was strongly reminded of the colour combination of red, black and white in fairy tales: so I referenced this in the beauty of the bird's black feathers, the statue's black dress and the red of drops of blood contrasting with the purity of the white paper. The blackbird lies at the bottom of the drawing and nearby stands an antique statue of the Virgin of the Seven Sorrows with an exquisite but disintegrating black silk dress. I echoed the blackbird's black feathers with the textures of her of dress. She watches over the dead bird and holds her votive bag in which a devil’s head (a terrifyingly strange wind-up toy from my childhood) is either contained or escaping. Both butterflies were painted from antique specimens and reference 17th century Dutch still life symbolism where the bright fire-red colour and velvet black of the red admiral butterfly was thought to come from its wings touching the fires of Hell. At the top of the drawing the white orange tip butterfly is a symbol of purity and hope of resurrection with the orange flowing from the butterfly in a continuous circle or halo.
h:82cms x w:65cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Salvation'Mortuus Merula 'Salvation'When I found the dead blackbird it looked perfect - it had only the tiniest drop of blood on its beak. Once I had drawn it on the white paper I was strongly reminded of the colour combination of red, black and white in fairy tales: so I referenced this in the beauty of the bird's black feathers, the statue's black dress and the red of drops of blood contrasting with the purity of the white paper. The blackbird lies at the bottom of the drawing and nearby stands an antique statue of the Virgin of the Seven Sorrows with an exquisite but disintegrating black silk dress. I echoed the blackbird's black feathers with the textures of her of dress. She watches over the dead bird and holds her votive bag in which a devil’s head (a terrifyingly strange wind-up toy from my childhood) is either contained or escaping. Both butterflies were painted from antique specimens and reference 17th century Dutch still life symbolism where the bright fire-red colour and velvet black of the red admiral butterfly was thought to come from its wings touching the fires of Hell. At the top of the drawing the white orange tip butterfly is a symbol of purity and hope of resurrection with the orange flowing from the butterfly in a continuous circle or halo.
h:82cms x w:65cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil on paper
2016 -
Mortuus Merula 'Salvation'Mortuus Merula 'Salvation'When I found the dead blackbird it looked perfect - it had only the tiniest drop of blood on its beak. Once I had drawn it on the white paper I was strongly reminded of the colour combination of red, black and white in fairy tales: so I referenced this in the beauty of the bird's black feathers, the statue's black dress and the red of drops of blood contrasting with the purity of the white paper. The blackbird lies at the bottom of the drawing and nearby stands an antique statue of the Virgin of the Seven Sorrows with an exquisite but disintegrating black silk dress. I echoed the blackbird's black feathers with the textures of her of dress. She watches over the dead bird and holds her votive bag in which a devil’s head (a terrifyingly strange wind-up toy from my childhood) is either contained or escaping. Both butterflies were painted from antique specimens and reference 17th century Dutch still life symbolism where the bright fire-red colour and velvet black of the red admiral butterfly was thought to come from its wings touching the fires of Hell. At the top of the drawing the white orange tip butterfly is a symbol of purity and hope of resurrection with the orange flowing from the butterfly in a continuous circle or halo.
h:82cms x w:65cms (framed).
Ink with watercolour and pencil on paper
2016