As the nights draw in and the stars twinkle in a crisp cold sky, it’s a time that evokes traditions and tales at the fireside around the world. It is old folk stories drawn from afar and told across the generations as families and friends gather that inspire the art of Oxfordshire Artweeks printmaker Sophie Basilevitch.
In the heart of Oxford, Sophie hand carves and prints beautiful, free-spirited animals in other-worldly settings, evocative of those moments when you step outside twenty-first century life into a seasonal softening of pace.
“Traditional stories offer us a chance to reach deep into our imagination,” she explains. “The tales often involve animals with extraordinary qualities as helpers or heroes, and remind us to respect nature. For centuries philosophers have written about how looking at expansive night-time skies made them feel part of something bigger and gave them a sense of awe and I hope to portray this by incorporating vaulted night skies and stars.
Falling Stars is inspired by a kingfisher who finds a gap in the sky where the stars fall through onto the lake below. “If one day, there was a crack in the sky, and the stars started falling through, would you be out there ready to catch them?” she laughs.
“The Pleiades, or seven sisters in Greek legend, are an open star cluster, a group of stars born around the same time from a gigantic cloud of gas and dust. Alcyone or Halcyone - ‘queen who wards off evil storms’ - was one of the seven sisters who married Ceyx, son of the morning star. They angered the gods and so the King of the Gods, Zeus, drowned Ceyx with a thunderbolt thrown at his ship at sea. When Alcyone heard the news, she threw herself into the sea, and was transformed into a halcyon (kingfisher). Legend tells that the kingfisher laid her eggs in a nest out at sea and Alcyone’s father, the God of the Winds, kept the storms at bay to keep them safe. And so, for seven days each on either side of the Winter solstice there is an unseasonal balmy period in the Mediterranean, when the wind doesn’t blow and waves are calm. This is where we get our phrase ‘halcyon days’ from, those fondly-remembered times in our past.
“Perhaps though,” Sophie continues, “the picture’s a symbol of hope for brighter days ahead, the kingfisher catching falling stars representing those rare times in life when happy chances fall your way, glowing and sparkling!
As an artist I love creating art that hints at a story and I often choose a Prussian Blue colour to represent a night-time scene, and often as a gradient from dark to light, both to add depth and a magical quality to my art, a sense of place between worlds. Perhaps using this colour is also because I loved to read fairy tales and folk stories at bedtime when I was a child. At this twilight time, there was a growing darkness, and as the night fell a tapestry of stars would scatter across the sky and my imagination was stirred before I fell into my dreams.”
When you know the story, the figure in the print no longer appears to be standing on a chain of islands, but rather a moving archipelago of whales: things are not always as they seem. And, as the whale-rider stands where the sea meets the sky and holds their light up high (perhaps as a celebration of the winter solstice) the whale beneath them is reflected amongst the stars from the sea below.
“There are so many stories old and new from across the world about these animals and since I made the print I heard that there was a rare white buck which was said to be ‘almost a unicorn’ living in Magdalen College’s deer park until recently. One of those strange cases where you realise magical beasts are closer than you think. It is also said that seeing a white stag is synonymous with the delivery of a message or a great change,” she comments, and so once again Sophie’s art looks both to the past and to the future.
For more on Sophie and her art visit her Etsy shop etsy.com/uk/shop/beryozamade and @beryozamade on Instagram