Thursday, January 26, 2017
The Illustration of Jeremy Hush
Few artists have managed to so effortlessly bridge the gap between classic and modern illustration as Jeremy Hush. Using ink and watercolor, Hush employs a technique that flourished over a century ago during the Golden Age of Illustration. At first glance, you might even mistake Hush's illustrations as older works commissioned for classic fairytales, yet closer inspection reveals a world of cracks and kinks and an artist well acquainted with the tropes of modern fantasy. While many of his peers have embraced digital media, Hush continues to carve out his space in traditional mediums. Though most of his work is watercolor on paper, he is also an artist that has done work with wood and glass. Not only are Hush's illustrations beautiful, they also manage to convey a mysterious and macabre fantasy world in miniature.
Saturday, January 14, 2017
Concept Art Spotlight: Tianhua Xu
For the past decade an increasing amount of concept art has been produced in China. Greater access to design software coupled with studios expanding their search for talent has produced a wave of superb new artists and illustrators melding cultural visions of what fantasy can look like. One of these artists is Tianhua Xu. The head of Chekyen Studios, Xu has been making a splash on artstation, cgworld, and cghub (RIP) over the past several years with his gorgeously lush and detailed renderings of characters and fantasyscapes. What makes Tianhua's work so interesting is the way he effortlessly blends U.S. and Chinese fantasy tropes to create a world all his own. Here are some of his most inspiring pieces.


Find more of Tianhua Xu's work at https://tianhuaxu.artstation.com/
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Looking Backwards: the Illustrations of Edmund Dulac
Edmund Dulac stands as one of the greatest illustrators of all time. Born in France in 1882 and later emigrating to London, Dulac would rise to prominence during the golden age of English illustration. Though the period was filled with iconic artists, no other illustrator would work so prolifically to broaden the visual scope of the fantasy genre. Dulac illustrated everything: Shakespeare, Rubaiyat, Hans Christian Andersen, Edgar Allan Poe, The Arabian Nights, and countless other fantasy-inspired illustrations for stamps and relief books. No other artist would so profoundly illuminate turn-of-the-century European literature.



Like other Golden Age illustrator's Dulac's work chiefly appeared in special deluxe edition printings that were immensely popular from 1890 until the beginning of the First World War. These vibrantly illustrated pressings were generally marketed as gifts that made their way into upper middle class libraries in England, France and the United States. Though fantasy had been a rapidly expanding genre throughout the 1800s, these illustrated books allowed readers to see worlds that were sometimes difficult to envision based on text alone. While a solid century's worth of film, television, comics and other visual media have provided us with a wealth of easily identifiable fantasy tropes, it's easy to forget how hard it might be for someone to envision a secondary world full of imaginary places, creatures, and technologies. Artists like Dulac not only helped enliven the texts they illustrated, but they also helped establish what we might consider the visual "palette" of modern fantasy.



Friday, January 6, 2017
Concept Art Spotlight: Kekai Kotaki
Kekai Kotaki is one of the most exciting American concept artists working in the video game industry today. Originally from Hawaii, Kotaki has built a career in Seattle creating concept pieces for ArenaNet, designing some absolutely stellar art for the Guild Wars series. Though most concept art tends to be more functional than artistic, the same can't be said for Kotaki, who has distinguished himself by crafting some of the most detailed and smartly composed concept pieces you'll find online today. Kekai's art exhibits both western and eastern influences, revealing a deep familiarity with the U.S. fantasy tradition, while incorporating a subtle anime flair that keeps his work from feeling overly ham-fisted (I'm personally reminded of the best Final Fantasy Tactics art when examining his character models). Not only are his renders gorgeous, they're intelligently composed and balanced so that his finished pieces feel more like illustrations than raw concept work. Kekai is also one of the few artists who can claim to have successfully mastered both character and environment pieces. Here are some of his most inspiring digital paintings.
See more of Kekai Kotaki's work on Kekai Kotaki Tumblr
and his personal website kekaiart.com
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Concept Art Spotlight: Marc Simonetti
Marc Simonetti is one of the better known SFF illustrators creating today. A prolific artist who has done work for fantasy stalwarts like George R.R. Martin and Terry Pratchett, Simonetti might be considered something of a transitional figure in the realm of SFF illustration. Though elements of his style harken back to gentler fantasy illustrators like Darrell K. Sweet and the Brothers Hildebrandt, Simonetti primarily works digitally, employing software to paint his compositions. The result is an excellent blend of old school color and CG scale. His Song of Ice and Fire illustrations, for example, definitely reveal the influence of classic 1970s book covers, yet he broadens the scope of those classic tropes by fixing his characters in larger fantasyscapes associated with contemporary concept art. Though his Iron Throne is certainly his most famous illustration, Simonetti is the "brush" responsible for a lot popular fantasy images that pop up on sites like Pinterest, Tumblr, and Facebook (though he is not always credited). Here are some of his most inspiring pieces.
You can find more of Marc Simonetti's profile here
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Looking Backwards: The Illustration of Gaston Bussiere
Never before have classic illustrators had so many eyes on their work. Over the last two decades, the internet has breathed second life into thousands of illustrations once consigned to the library. Beyond occasional coffee table books, most people had spotty and limited access to vintage illustration. The vast visual archive of the internet has provided a whole new gallery free and open to the public. This "revival" isn't just limited to illustrators--a wide variety of nineteenth-century artists are receiving second consideration thanks to the online circulation of their work. Romantic figure painting, generally dismissed by the modernists and ignored by the contemporary art world, has found a whole new audience via Google Image Search. As such, a vital visual contribution to the world of fantasy is being re-explored as "forgotten" illustrators and artists receive fresh attention.
Though the Pre-Raphaelites have experienced a resurgence in popularity over the last two decades, the same can't be said for many of their symbolist counterparts. While artists like John William Waterhouse and Dante Gabrielle Rosetti dominate Pinterest boards and "classic art" tumblrs, the symbolists have been somewhat left out of the internet's rediscovery and celebration of once shunned Romantic painters. One of these largely forgotten romantics is Gaston Bussiere. Though close with symbolist giants like Gustave Moreau and much in demand during his lifetime, Bussiere's work has been surprisingly neglected given the renaissance of interest in turn of the century illustration. Considering the recent attention given to illustrators like Arthur Rackham, Warwick Goble, and Edmund Dulac, it seems a bit odd that Bussiere remains generally unknown.
Had Bussiere been a minor figure working on the outskirts of the mainstream, his obscurity would be more understandable. Yet, the artist was one of the most regarded and sought after French illustrators during a rich period in French illumination. Bussiere illustrated works for major figures like Berlioz, Balzac, Flaubert, Gautier and Oscar Wilde. It would seem that these associations alone would have secured his place in the annals of illustration, yet most of the designers I spoke to, many of them history buffs who enjoy mining the past for inspiration, were completely unfamiliar with Bussiere's work (as I was myself before beginning work on this post).
To explore the work of Bussiere is to explore a world of lush colors and sumptuous light. Like Moreau, Bussiere's paintings are awash in organic hues, yet Bussiere's colors are even more vibrant, almost Blakean in their exuberance. Like Waterhouse, Bussiere had a fondness for painting nymphs and dryads. Lithe figures can be found lounging and playing alongside the water. Like many of his contemporaries, Bussiere was drawn to classic young heroines and "femme fatales" like Joan of Arc and Salome. Though most of his themes are drawn from classic literature, Bussiere's Wagner illustrations are some of his most "fantasy" centric pieces. Here are a handful of some of the artist's paintings.
Though the Pre-Raphaelites have experienced a resurgence in popularity over the last two decades, the same can't be said for many of their symbolist counterparts. While artists like John William Waterhouse and Dante Gabrielle Rosetti dominate Pinterest boards and "classic art" tumblrs, the symbolists have been somewhat left out of the internet's rediscovery and celebration of once shunned Romantic painters. One of these largely forgotten romantics is Gaston Bussiere. Though close with symbolist giants like Gustave Moreau and much in demand during his lifetime, Bussiere's work has been surprisingly neglected given the renaissance of interest in turn of the century illustration. Considering the recent attention given to illustrators like Arthur Rackham, Warwick Goble, and Edmund Dulac, it seems a bit odd that Bussiere remains generally unknown.
Had Bussiere been a minor figure working on the outskirts of the mainstream, his obscurity would be more understandable. Yet, the artist was one of the most regarded and sought after French illustrators during a rich period in French illumination. Bussiere illustrated works for major figures like Berlioz, Balzac, Flaubert, Gautier and Oscar Wilde. It would seem that these associations alone would have secured his place in the annals of illustration, yet most of the designers I spoke to, many of them history buffs who enjoy mining the past for inspiration, were completely unfamiliar with Bussiere's work (as I was myself before beginning work on this post).
To explore the work of Bussiere is to explore a world of lush colors and sumptuous light. Like Moreau, Bussiere's paintings are awash in organic hues, yet Bussiere's colors are even more vibrant, almost Blakean in their exuberance. Like Waterhouse, Bussiere had a fondness for painting nymphs and dryads. Lithe figures can be found lounging and playing alongside the water. Like many of his contemporaries, Bussiere was drawn to classic young heroines and "femme fatales" like Joan of Arc and Salome. Though most of his themes are drawn from classic literature, Bussiere's Wagner illustrations are some of his most "fantasy" centric pieces. Here are a handful of some of the artist's paintings.
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Concept Art Spotlight: Jakup Rozalski
In general, fantasy concept art tends to favor a kind of quasi-realism, an ultra-polished digital gleam that lends itself to video games and CG powered film. At its very best, this quest for hyper detail can produce some stunning artwork (see last week's Concept Art Spotlight devoted to portrait artist Eve Ventrue). Yet at it's very worst, digital concept art often looks like, well, digital concept art. That is to say, less like art and more like a collection of shiny character models and oversaturated matte landscapes.
That's why it's so refreshing to encounter an artist like Jakub Rozalski whose pieces lean more toward impressionism than realism. While Rozalski is often a contributing artist supplying work for larger projects, much of his stuff feels more like quality illustration than toss away concept art. Each piece seems to tell its own story, and you'd be hard pressed to find an artist whose work conveys more narrative power. Though he works digitally, his painterly style adds a certain cloudy ambience to each piece that suggests a greater world beyond. Jakub is especially good at using fog and haze to capture the menace of beasts on the prowl.
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