Interlace

Dublin Core

Title

Interlace

Description

According to artist George Bain, Religion and Pagan laws had the greatest influence on the art form of Celtic knots, playing an important role in there design.

The interlacing of human form and Celtic knots evolved from laws forbidding drawing portraits of human figures as this was tantamount to copying a work of the creator, “God the Almighty,” explains Bain in his book Celtic Art. Similarly, it was forbidden to draw animals or plants. Angels and mythic creatures, on the other hand, were not of the earthly realm. And Saints had departed this realm. Thus, Celtic knot patterns were used to represent most of the human form, while heads, appendages and tails were often depicted using more life-like representations.

Creator

Vector image created from George Bain book, Celtic Art.

Files

knotwork -GB-from-book.png

Citation

Vector image created from George Bain book, Celtic Art., “Interlace,” Open Virtual Worlds, accessed April 29, 2024, http://straylight.cs.st-andrews.ac.uk/omeka/items/show/394.

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  1. knotwork -GB-from-book.png