MAY! She has skipped in barefoot, trailing her beautiful skirts through our days. It has taken me a surprisingly long time to land after our Australasian travels: my seasonal clock has been all disrupted, and I found myself bemused to see the hedgerows in the relative cold announcing spring after my body had been through a tropical and otherworldly summer. The spring uprush has taken my senses by surprise, and I am awkward and unfamiliar with the flowers, like with friends I've not seen for a long time, feeling slightly bad for having missed their birthdays. I have struggled to re-find my rhythms and to re-track my own seasonal footprints. Writing about our journey for you here has proved harder than I thought, though it will come, I am sure. This strange seasonal-soul-lag has made me reflect a lot upon travel and how it changes you on your return, and on the different kinds of weight you can have, depending on how much you travel, and on how much you sink your roots into the loam on your homecoming.
But Oh! the Bluebells are singing! A ridiculous beauty, sapphire blue, dancing outrageously with acid spring green, with bright yellow gorse, with delicate white stitchwort and pink appleblossom,
The last clouds of April showers scud across the skies and leave rainbows and ever-warmer sunlight in their wake.
And Dartmoor moss maps continents on granite amid a resounding ocean of blue.
Everywhere we look, slopes are carpeted with this cerulean cloak of spring treasure.
And we walk to the tops of them to look over this land of ours with a thermos of tea and flapjacks and thoughts for the year ahead,
While Macha swims after flower-fish in the flower-ocean.
Dartmoor's colours have called my still-floating spirit back to this beloved place, and surrounded me with wild and mossy, blackbird-singing here-ness, allowing me to once again catch up with my own tail disappearing round the next corner, as it always does at this urging time of the year.
The Mayday holiday was spent celebrating the rites of spring in old ways. On May 1st I went with friends to Padstow in Cornwall where they hold the well-known 'Obby 'Oss festival - a strange and delightful folk ritual drama held every year to celebrate the coming of summer.
The pretty seaside town of Padstow is bedecked with bunting - centering on a maypole - and crowds from far and near throng the streets.
We stand, clutching song sheets, squashed among the red-and-white clad rabble waiting outside the Golden Lion pub for the emergence of the famous 'Obby 'Oss and its retinue.
When what to my wondering ears should appear, but armies of efflorescent accordions!
Driven on with the beating of drums and all playing the same tune for the entire day they wander the town heralding that strangest of creatures - the 'Obby 'Oss...
The early origins of this festival and its 'Oss are unknown, though in its current form it can be dated back to 1803. Speculations have been made about its roots in pre-Christian spring celebrations, and the 'Oss is certainly a cousin of the Welsh Mari Lwyd and other European hobby horse traditions.
It is a strange and unnerving thing made of black sailcloth draped over a 6-foot wide hoop worn by a member of the Padstow community, and topped with a gruesome mask with a power and design seeming more akin to the folk ritual of Africa than the coves of Cornwall. At the front and back of the hoop are a kind of horse head and tail, and as the 'Oss dances through the crowds to the music, the skirt sways up and down, attempting to catch young maidens under it. If you are one of these luckies, it is said that you'll become pregnant within the year! All the while a "teazer" dance-jousts with the 'Oss and leads it through the throng. People take turns at this role, and all the while the master of ceremonies calls: "'Oss! 'Oss!", and the crowd responds: "Wee 'Oss!"
There are two 'Obby 'Osses parading through the town. The one with the red-and-white retinue is the Old 'Oss, the original. The one with the blue-and-white retinue is the Peace 'Oss, introduced in the early 20th century at first to discourage over-consumption of alcohol, and then after the First World War, for peace. The two 'Osses eventually meet and dance together under the maypole in the evening. (And alcohol consumption is still a central feature of the festivities!)
I was quite taken by the experience of being in a fired-up crowd of ordinary people (i.e. not belonging to some special interest group or society), not partaking in dry pomp-and-circumstance or Christianized calendar observance, but celebrating a frolicsome pagan holiday. The tune that was played round and round all day (with death and rebirth refrains) I found eerily compelling, and even more so when I later watched this early film footage of the festival in 1932 when they evidently danced to the exact same tune:
The red and white piratey get-up emerged apparently after folklorist Alan Lomax visited Padstow in the 1950s and prompted the people to dress up for the filming. The outfit has stuck as firmly as the tune.
I love what it says in that clip about the people of Padstow needing the 'Oss to come back every year, about them not feeling right all year if the 'Oss didn't come and visit them on May morning. I love that the tune is always the same, and that the 'Oss is so odd and compelling in its presence. I love that only people born in Padstow can take part in the mumming, And I love that these things still go on in the town squares and village greens of England.
Not content with one May rite, a few days later we all went to a nearby Dartmoor village - Lustleigh - to enjoy its somehow more quaint, yet utterly delightful May celebrations.
There was music and Morris Dancing, there was the familiar jester figure, there were families out with picnics on the grass.
There was a May Queen, enthroned in a bower of flowers and paraded round the village, followed by blossomed youngsters all in white, and us all, too.
Back up to the village centre where a town crier announced proceedings and the vicar - religiously diversified - flicked us all with branch-flung blessing water.
And then we made our way to the orchard where the May Queen was crowned atop a stone carved with the names of all previous May Queens. The May Queen has to have been born in Lustleigh, and is chosen because she is the girl who has danced most times around the maypole.
The May Queen's retinue walks around the maypole and lays flowers at her feet.
And then they dance to music played by a local posse of musicians and weave the colours of the year in patterns around the axis of the world...
And then after all of that, once the raffles and picnics and Morrising were over, my little trio Krasa played some Klezmer in the pub garden. Lisa (on fiddle), being a Lustleigh girl, was May Queen one year too, and has her name on the stone.
All of this delighted and warmed me in a way only an English village event could. I loved watching the people's faces as their children danced, and witnessing the particular tantrums and larks of a day out in the sunshine with my community.
And now, it's time for me to show you some new work! This piece was painted at the end of last year, many months in the making, but I could not show it to you until its intended recipient had seen it. Now, as the fires and blossoms and dances of spring fill the margins of my vision, I shall show you this painting of nature goddesses, of the earth's fertility, of Maiden, Mother & Crone.
She was born from a rounded-pregnant oak burr, which took weeks to sand smooth, and which was so awkward in shape I had to work on it on the floor.
She gradually took shape, the triple goddess against the full moon. Maiden, Mother and Crone joining hands in the circle of life-death-life, Maiden and Crone holding a garland of Hawthorn, Rose & Elder over the head of the Mother. In the belly of the Mother are housed all four elements - earth, air, fire, water - and from this holy crucible spring vines which reach out through the painting and entwine the godesses all three. At their feet in the leaf mould grow mushrooms of all incarnations - life from death. The whole scene is nestled within a red womblike window, as if the oak is revealing to us a secret of the true nature of things.
This was made for very dear friends Emma and Graeme. Graeme commissioned me to paint it for Emma's birthday, and suggested a triple goddess, but beyond that left the imagery to me. Inspired by the wonderful piece of wood we'd found, and somehow a little daunted at making a painting for a friend, I set off determined to make this Maiden-Mother-Crone much earthier and more real than any other triple goddess imagery I'd seen before (all too purple, airbrushed and costumed for my taste). The characters of each aspect of the goddess emerged of their own accord.
This is a painting I am proud of, and it now awaits its perfect alcove..
Meanwhile, the earth provides a green granite niche, and offers up its own unanimous tendrils.
There will be prints of this painting available soon, along with other new works and completely revamped prints, which I can confidently say are the best yet, and quite covetable, so stand by for the spring reopening of my shop in just over a week!
Maiden, Mother, Crone ~ oils on oak 2013 ~ by Rima Staines |
As I walk down the lanes of frothing hedgerows into my thirty-fifth summer, gathering wayside treasures, I see honesty,
and gold,
I see paths deep in the woods,
and homesteads,
I see the path and the river side by side like elemental opposites,
and always I see the Maiden,
Mother,
and Crone watching over me...
Oh Rima, your photos of the bluebells are so beautiful. I love your new piece of artwork, well done. Looking forward to seeing you at WWW weather permitting.
ReplyDeletefirstly, welcome home from your travels! i have missed your soulful musings.
ReplyDeleteand thank you for sharing your may day meanderings...an english spring (summer-tide, really, according to the old ways) is such a beautiful thing, and i've always wanted to see the padstow 'oss myself.
your latest art---the triple goddess piece---tenderly powerful, as always.
What a beautiful envelopingly lovely post. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI recently read "Mummers, Maypoles, and Milkmaids" where I first hear of 'Obby Oss - wonderful to see your photos.
What celebrations! The painting is truly a wonder. I love the belly and all it holds, beautiful.
ReplyDeleteDear Rima,
ReplyDeletewhat a stunning painting you have photographed the making of here! I just wanted to say that I bought your print, Anja in the Horsechestnut, for my brother's birthday, as my sister in law will soon be having a little babba, and despite my apprehensions that my gadget-loving engineer brother wouldn't take to it, it made his face light up and he announced that it will hang framed in their house. Thank you!
Dear Rima, what beautiful photographs of all the bluebells! Blue drifts of sapphire. I loved seeing the festivals you visited, how I wish I could see the Morris-Dancers once again. And only a few days ago I mentioned I can remember dancing around the maypole when I was at school, so it was lovely to see the children performing.
ReplyDeleteYour painting is just beautiful, it really jumps out from the screen. We are all glad to see you back posting, welcome home!
Jane
Your posts and pictures really gives me relaxation from the chaotic cityscape and inspiration to improve my work. Thanks Rima!
ReplyDeleteThis post is a jewel, Rima, and so are you--in all your braided goodness :) Take care! Enjoy spring! x
ReplyDeleteAh, this is exactly what I needed to see today, all the color, ritual, and creativity to bolster up a normal Tuesday. We're fresh from our own May adventures (at a Fairie Festival in the states), and I'm holding all this energy close to my heart for inspiration. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteSo glad you have followed the threads back to the weft and warp of Dartmoor. It is a wonderful post of magic and treasure as always.
ReplyDeleteYour wonderful photos are a feast for the eyes and what a treat to come home from foreign travels to England in springtime. I have always wanted to see dancing round the maypole and the ribbons magically woven down the pole. I too love that these and other ancient seasonal traditions are still being upheld in parts of the country. Long may it be so.
ReplyDeleteWhat a delight to stumble upon your page, and the gorgeous triple goddess oak plaque. I love your imagery and the authenticity that emerges in each figure.
ReplyDeleteA million thank yous for this beautiful post. Your words, your work, your photos, all so inspiring.
ReplyDeleteYou seem to live in paradise!
So I got two presents from you today: This blog, inspiring and uplifting, and some prints you sent to me
ReplyDeleteSuch a luxury of beauty and blessings! Oh what a wonder it must be to live in a country with deep traditions and people not abashed to celebrate them.
ReplyDeleteThe painting is fabulously rich and earthy, soul-touching.
I also have to say I love the wild look of your dog - wild and yet gentle. :)
Wonderful new painting Rima! And how lovely to see you, Tom and Macha in your bluebell woods.
ReplyDeletebeautiful Rima,thankyou x
ReplyDeleteYour new painting is beautiful Rima, I love the fire in her belly and the eyes are really deep with knowledge and secrets. I used to be taken to the Padstock obby 'oss as a child and the memories are deep and meaningful yet also buried and cloudy, you captured the event really well - I love the picture of the chubby baby. Betty
ReplyDeleteThe beauty of the bluebell woods makes me cry! Is this even real? :O <3 Woooow! And I would SO love to take part in a May Day celebration! I love the painting too.
ReplyDeleteI love the face in the stones in the last photo.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Rima. Perfectly distilled moments, heady with atmosphere.
ReplyDeleteMade me smile all the way through. Always does!
ReplyDeleteSo beautiful Rima, thank you.
it takes space and time to get back in your body after a big trip. lovely spring photos and such blues, a fine painting, too.
ReplyDeleteSo lovely,as always Rima,so strange that your last commissioned painting has caught my attention so much since the pregnant woman on the picture reminds me so much of what i see looking in the mirror every morning (i am 8 months pregnant!)Bestest wishes to you and your loved ones!
ReplyDeleteHello Rima - what a home-binding this post represents for you. If you harboured any thoughts of settling in ancestral territory under a sleeping mountain, the bluebells and the spring rites of Devon must surely settle you back in Devon. I felt that odd displacement coming back to NZ last year when the may was coming out here! Your time at Padstow reminds me of my own day there - dipping my foot under the 'Oss's skirt to increase my chance of a conceiving (there were obstacles). My friend found a horse hair from one of the tails and wove me a ring - I still think of my first-born as my fairy child so wrought about with old fertility magic was she. So glad to see the Morris dancers too and the May Queen stone. My favourite part of your painting is the Crone's eyes - maybe because I've reached that phase of Life myself. All the best Jeneane (Hobby)
ReplyDeleteI must admit a little envy, we have nothing like a bluebell wood where I live in Australia. It is a rich sea of such wondrous colour! I love the art! I have a print of the Weed Wife, I think I may just have to also purchase a print of this one too!
ReplyDeleteGood to see Spring well on with you there. It does take a while to re-adjust-it took us a month this time last year.
ReplyDeleteBlessings Be xx
Thank you for sharing your art and the beauty of your home and the slight glance on your feelings about travel and coming home.
ReplyDeleteMagnificent new painting, Rima. Blessed with the commission of a dear friend, the images are radiant and through my Pacific soul I feel Mother Earth pulsing through my fingers to the Oak.
ReplyDeleteWhat a journey you live, and share.
Aloha Mokihana
All, all wonder-full and one of my favourites of your work. I am specially drawn to the crone - that is a representation I can aspire to.
ReplyDeleteAnd it is a delight to have your pictures and your words and your good self back home where we have been watering your roots to keep them strong. x
This was an amazing post!
ReplyDeleteReally enjoyed reading and
the pictures of the forest - fantastic!
So, for you Rima - at this time.(I wrote this a few years ago while experiencing The Return after a long while away). Hope you enjoy.
--
You have to return eventually
To see everything differently
To see what you see differently
And how you see it differently
Due to having gone away
Old points of reference
Faded through absence
Return to conscience
And highlights the essence
Of what you have transcended
Compared with if you had stayed
This place is not the same
But its from where you came
Similar, but only in name
Or is it rather who you became
Will what you have gained
Not fade, not be difficult to retain
Unless you go again?
**
by Jean-Jacques @ Gypsy Café
© 2009. All Rights Reserved.
gypsycafe.org
such a wonderful post, i loved joining you in the celebrations~and the new artwork...it sings so loudly!
ReplyDeleteThanks for a wonderful post. I always look forward to your words and pictures so much.
ReplyDeleteAs always, I love your artwork, so dark and beautiful, dreamtime in paint.
Maggie
Thank you for your wonderful post and the impressions. Have great summertime ahead, Inge
ReplyDeleteYour blog posts are nourishing to the core dear Rima!
ReplyDeleteI do so love stopping by here to peer through the cyberspace window into your back garden, into the hedgerows and the bluebells of the English Countryside.
Wishing you and Tom and Maca a most magical summer~ Wild rose petal blessings from the Honey Grove Hedgerow.