Celtic Myth Podshow
   
Current Status :   17th May 2012 - Real life has been keeping us away from the show recently, but catching up with things today ... All being well, shall start on the script for the 3rd Welsh Episode! Yay! :) ... Many blessings to you all! Gary and Ruth xxx

Jodi Whitby

Faery & Fantasy Artist

Jodi Whitby

Website Jodi Whitby   Genre Faery/Fantasy Artist
Myspace jodimerrett   Facebook Jodi

Contribution to the Show

Jodi has been kind enough to allow us to publish a gallery of her beautiful faerie and fantasy art. You'll find superb images of the Green Man and if you follow her work, you'll know that not only does she work to commission but also makes her designs available on a wide variety of surfaces. You can find her Gallery in our galleries section.

Biography

Jodi Whitby lives with her husband and three young children in her birth town of Midhurst, West Sussex and has been drawing since she was a little girl. Despite now being a full-time mum, she still finds time to draw and paint.  

She mainly works freelance as an artist but happily designs anything that is asked of her - company logos, graphics and illustrations.  Most of her creations are born in the small hours of the morning whilst her family peacefully sleeps.  She turns many of her designs into greetings cards or transfers them onto candles, wood, clothing....anything.

Our natural surroundings are of great inspiration to Jodi along with her keen interest in ancient folklore and of the pagan wheel of life.  One of her loves is to go on walks with her family through the local woods and experience the many faces of the forest as the seasons change.

Jodi is a big lover of Mother Nature, and as you might expect she not only has fairies living at the bottom of her garden but throughout the house as well!

Commissions Welcome!

Please contact Jodi by emailing jodipodes@gmail.com

The Green Man

The Green Man is the ever-returning energy of vegetation (Spring rebirth) and wild Nature. His magic is celebrated throughout the world, but he is most often associated with northern Europe and Celtic cultures. The deity we know as the Green Man has a long worldwide history. In the Indus religion he is the ‘Green Thing’, in ancient Babylon myth he bears the name, Tammuz. Elsewhere in the Islamic faith he is Ilyas, in Greece, Dionysus; in Sweden, the Pfingstl; ‘Green George’ is his European name and locally, in the British Isles, he is known variously as Green George, Jack-in-the-Green or Jack-in-the-Bush; the Green Man, Lord of the Forest and Robin Hood. He also has strong connections with Herne the Hunter, Cernunnos, and also in the stories of King Arthur as the fearsome Green Knight who Gawain encounters. In the late Iron Age this deity was known to the Celtic population of Britain as Erriapus and on the continent of Europe as Esus. Under both names, images of this deity have been found on Celtic stone and metalwork as a head emerging from foliage.

His face stares down at us from the roofs , pillars and doorways of the great cathedrals and churches of Europe, he appears on second century Roman columns in Turkey and in Jain temples in Rajasthan. He is found all over England, some parts of Wales and Scotland and a few rare places in Ireland. On the continent he has been seen and noted in Germany, France, Italy, Holland and is said to be found in Spain, Hungary and Poland. India and Malaysia have their own Green Man. His roots may go back to the shadow hunters who painted the caves of Lascaux and Altimira and may climb through history, in one of his manifestations through Robin Hood and the Morris Dances of Old England to be chiselled in wood and stone even to this day by men and women who no longer know his story but sense that something old and strong and tremendously important lies behind his leafy mask.

 

© All non-original items about Jodi Whitby on this page are copyright Jodi Whitby 2009

  2009 Parsec Nominated

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