Lafrowda Festival painting benefit auction
3rd July 2008
For the last six years I’ve been doing paintings based on the Lafrowda Day parades that are the culmination of our Lafrowda Festival in Cornwall’s most westerly town of St Just-in-Penwith. Five years ago the picture I’d made based on the 2003 Festival sold at a benefit auction for the Cornish art archive and every year since then I’ve run benefit auctions of these paintings for the Lafrowda Festival itself, an event that is expensive for our local community to put on and that is well worth your support.
This year I again ran such an auction. This time the piece was my Lafrowda Dancers based on the Samba dancers who headed up last year’s parade and on the day it raised a worthwhile sum to help in the running of future festivals.
I’m hoping to celebrate this year’s wonderful Lafrowda festival which culminated on Lafrowda Day on July 19th with a new painting. Watch this space!
You may be wondering why St Just has a festival called Lafrowda. What I’ve been able to find out is that LAFROWDA is an ancient name for the town and that The LA in Lafrowda definitely comes from LAN, Cornish for a sacred enclosure around a church. FROWDA may be a form of BREDER meaning brothers ( from Place names of West Penwith by P. A. S. Pool). Others see it as a form of the word ROOD as in a rood screen in a church. This incidentally is the theory that makes most sense to me as the legend of the rood, the tree of life, is central to the ORDINALIA, the cycle of Cornish medieval miracle plays for which St Just’s ancient open air theatre, the PLEN-AN-GWARY was built at least 500 years ago. The Lafrowda Festival is now held every year in Mid July and culminates in the Processions and other open air events of LAFROWDA DAY that end up in the PLEN-AN-GWARY.
>>Click here to see an image of the Lafrowda Dancers picture. >> Click here to see all my Lafrowda Festival paintings since 2002.



