fbpx
Wikipedia

Illustrating Middle-earth

Since the publication of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Hobbit in 1937, artists including Tolkien himself have sought to capture aspects of Middle-earth fantasy novels in paintings and drawings. He was followed in his lifetime by artists whose work he liked, such as Pauline Baynes, Mary Fairburn, Queen Margrethe II of Denmark, and Ted Nasmith, and by some whose work he rejected, such as Horus Engels for the German edition of The Hobbit. Tolkien had strong views on illustration of fantasy, especially in the case of his own works. His recorded opinions range from his rejection of the use of images in his 1936 essay On Fairy-Stories, to agreeing the case for decorative images for certain purposes, and his actual creation of images to accompany the text in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Commentators including Ruth Lacon and Pieter Collier have described his views on illustration as contradictory, and his requirements as being as fastidious as his editing of his novels.

Gandalf fighting the Balrog on the bridge of Khazad-dûm. Scraperboard by Alexander Korotich, 1981

After Tolkien's death in 1973, many artists have created illustrations of Middle-earth characters and landscapes, in media ranging from Alexander Korotich's scraperboard depictions to Margrete II of Denmark's woodcut-style drawings, Sergey Yuhimov's Russian Orthodox icon-style representations, and Donato Giancola's neoclassical oil paintings. Peter Jackson's 2001-2003 film trilogy of The Lord of the Rings, and later of The Hobbit, made use of concept art by John Howe and Alan Lee; the resulting images of Middle-earth and the story's characters have strongly influenced subsequent representations of Tolkien's work. Jenny Dolfen has specialised in making watercolour paintings of The Silmarillion, winning three awards from The Tolkien Society. Graham A. Judd has illustrated his father's book on the Flora of Middle-earth with woodcuts showing both the flowers and the scenes associated with them in the legendarium.

Tolkien's artwork edit

J. R. R. Tolkien accompanied his Middle-earth fantasy writings with a wide variety of non-narrative materials, including paintings and drawings, calligraphy, and maps. In his lifetime, some of his artworks were included in his novels The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings; others were used on the covers of different editions of these books, and later on the cover of The Silmarillion.[T 1] Posthumously, collections of his artworks have been published, and academics have begun to evaluate him as an artist as well as an author.[1][2]

Tolkien's views on illustration edit

Tolkien held strong opinions on illustrating fantasy, especially of his own works, but his statements made at different times are not easy to reconcile into a single point of view.[3][4]

Destroy useful ambiguity edit

In his 1936 essay On Fairy-Stories, Tolkien wrote that "However good in themselves, illustrations do little good to fairy-stories."[4][T 2] He argued that by giving somewhat generic descriptions in words, the author leaves freedom for the reader's imagination. The Tolkien scholar Nils Agøy suggests that in The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien makes frequent use of ambiguity for exactly this reason.[4] Tolkien's illustrations for The Hobbit provide, in the words of the Tolkien scholars Wayne Hammond and Christina Scull, "backgrounds on which readers can paint their own mental pictures, directed by a text but not constrained by too specific an image".[5]

Could work if well-drawn edit

The 1938 American edition of The Hobbit was illustrated with five of Tolkien's own watercolour paintings.[1] Tolkien was at that time willing to have images in the actual text of the novel, illustrating specific episodes of the narrative. He commented in a 1938 letter to his American publishers, Houghton Mifflin, who were looking for illustrations for their forthcoming edition of The Hobbit, that they should seek an artist "who can draw [human figures]" as his own drawings of hobbits were "an unsafe guide", some of them "very ill-drawn".[T 3][a] He mentions, too, that there could be "special illustrations of episodes" in the story where the hobbit Bilbo might appear wearing boots, which he says Bilbo acquired in Rivendell, but in the other illustrations he should be drawn with bare feet.[T 3]

Must be in keeping with the text edit

 
Tolkien thought that Milein Cosman's illustrations unhelpfully resembled the fashionable Edward Ardizzone's work (example pictured).[T 4]

In 1946, Tolkien voiced his objections to Horus Engels's illustrations for a German edition of The Hobbit. He described the work as having "certain merits", but "too 'Disnified' for my taste: Bilbo with a dribbling nose, and Gandalf as a figure of vulgar fun rather than the Odinic wanderer that I think of".[T 5][b]

Tolkien felt that the requirements of a good illustration were not the same as for being a respected or fashionable artist. When Allen & Unwin were working with the artist Milein Cosman on illustrations for Farmer Giles of Ham in 1948, Tolkien described the sample drawings as resembling the work of Feliks Topolski or Edward Ardizzone, commenting that he wasn't "much interested in [their] fashionableness".[T 4] That did not make up, in his opinion, for "their lack of resemblance to their text".[T 4] He stated, among more detailed objections, that the artist should have located the illustrations in or near Oxfordshire; that the trees were poorly drawn; and that the dragon was "absurd. Ridiculously coy, and quite incapable of performing any of the tasks laid on him by the author."[T 4] In short, he found Cosman's samples "wholly out of keeping with the style or manner of the text".[T 4]

By 1949, Allen & Unwin had found another artist to illustrate Farmer Giles of Ham, Pauline Baynes. Tolkien expressed delight at the result, writing that the images were "more than illustrations, they are a collateral theme", explaining that "they reduced my text to a commentary on the drawings."[T 6]

Should "depict the noble and the heroic" edit

Tolkien met the Dutch artist Cor Blok in 1961.[6] He liked the five paintings that he saw enough to purchase two of them. "Battle of the Hornburg II" hung in the front hall of his house to welcome visitors.[7] "The Dead Marshes" too found a place in his house; Blok later gave Tolkien a third painting, "Dunharrow", out of his 149 The Lord of the Rings works.[8] Tolkien wrote to his publisher, Rayner Unwin, that he found Blok's paintings "most attractive", especially the Hornburg image. He thought the other works "attractive as pictures but bad as illustrations"; he doubted whether any living "artist of talent ... would even try to depict the noble and the heroic", elements that he felt central to his work.[9] All the same, when asked in December 1962 who might be able to illustrate a deluxe edition of The Lord of the Rings (as a set of six volumes), Tolkien proposed Blok and Pauline Baynes.[10] Blok added in 2011 that the 20th century had created two stereotypes of "the noble and the heroic": totalitarian hero-figures such as the "Heroes of Labour" of Stalinist Art, or the "bulging muscles (and breasts)" of the superheroes of comic books. He commented that neither are suitable for illustrating Tolkien, and that the two approaches had made it hard for artists of other sorts to represent heroism, even on "a small scale".[11]

 
Detail of Cor Blok's painting Battle of the Hornburg II that Tolkien liked enough to purchase. It was the only one of Blok's Middle-earth images that worked for Tolkien as an illustration, as opposed to a stand-alone painting.[9]

Should leave freedom for imagination edit

Tolkien told Blok that "he was not in favour of illustrated editions".[6] However, they agreed that an illustrator should omit anything non-essential from an image.[4] In a letter to Baynes, who had by then illustrated several of his minor works, Tolkien similarly mentioned his objections to illustration, but stated that a case could be made for "illustration (or decoration!) applied to small things".[T 7] Agøy comments that Tolkien's remarks to these artists are "not unambiguous", but taken together suggest that he believed that freedom should be left for the reader.[4]

Contradictory opinions edit

The artist Ruth Lacon argues that Tolkien's actions, preparing illustrations for his own works, conflict with what he wrote about their use. She suggests that images are especially useful in complex texts like The Silmarillion.[3] Pieter Collier, who edited a book of Cor Blok's illustrations for The Lord of the Rings, commented that "Tolkien's criteria for excellence in illustration were as fastidious" as those for selecting "le mot juste in his writing."[9] The scholar of literature Aurore Noury comments that one of the paradoxes around Tolkien is that he hoped his subcreated world would live on after him, but that he imposed strict requirements on anyone who sought to illustrate his novels.[12]

Some of Tolkien's views on illustration[13][4]
Style Application Example artists
Inaccurate
failing to match text, tone wrong
Unusable Horus Engels[T 5]
Milein Cosman[T 4]
Decorative
attractive but without heroic tone
Minor (non-Middle-earth) tales, vistas, maps Pauline Baynes
Tolkien's own artwork
Illustrative
with "noble or awe-inspiring" quality
In or alongside the text Margrethe II of Denmark[14]
Mary Fairburn

In dialogue with Tolkien: 1937–1973 edit

Tove Jansson, 1962 edit

 
Tove Jansson is better known for her Moomin characters.

The Swedish-speaking Finnish author, novelist, painter and illustrator Tove Jansson, who had written and illustrated the Moomin books, illustrated Swedish and Finnish translations of The Hobbit. Among these is a very large Gollum for the 1962 Swedish translation.[15] Tolkien was surprised to see a giant monster towering above Bilbo, but realised that the book did not say how small Gollum was.[c] He edited the second edition to state explicitly that Gollum was "a small, slimy creature".[16]

The scholar of literature Björn Sundmark states that Jansson's work helped to define how Middle-earth fantasy could be depicted visually.[17] He adds that the edition with her illustrations was not reprinted for many years,[d] even though reviewers and "Tolkienists" liked Jansson's "expressive"[18] images. Sundmark suggests that the reason was that in the 1960s, a new, more realistic style became the norm for fantasy art.[18]

Mary Fairburn, 1968 edit

In May 1968, the English artist Mary Fairburn sent Tolkien several illustrations of The Lord of the Rings, mostly in coloured ink. He replied that they were "splendid. They are better pictures in themselves and also show far more attention to the text than any that have yet been submitted to me".[13] He added "I am beginning to ... think that an illustrated edition [of The Lord of the Rings] might be a good thing."[13]

The project went no further, as Tolkien, aged 76, injured his leg and was in the process of moving house from Oxford to Bournemouth; and the removals team seriously disorganised his papers. In October 1968 he wrote to Fairburn that his publisher Rayner Unwin would take "some months" to decide whether to publish an illustrated edition of The Lord of the Rings, mentioning that black-and-white illustrations were more likely. She states that she created black-and-white versions of 26 of her paintings, one for each chapter of The Fellowship of the Ring and the first four chapters of The Two Towers, the last being "Treebeard". Fairburn lost many of the illustrations in repeated house moves; nine survive,[e] of which one, a coloured painting of "Galadriel at the Well in Lórien" came into Tolkien's possession.[13] Fairburn's illustrations remained unknown to scholars until 2012;[19][13] her work was finally published in the Tolkien Calendar 2015.[20]

 
Detail of The Pass on Mount Caradhras, Mary Fairburn's 1968 image for "The Ring Goes South".[f] Tolkien called her work "splendid", liking it enough to think of an illustrated The Lord of the Rings.[13]

Pauline Baynes edit

Pauline Baynes created the illustrations for some of Tolkien's minor works, such as the 1949 Farmer Giles of Ham and the 1962 The Adventures of Tom Bombadil.[21] In 1969, Tolkien's publisher Allen & Unwin commissioned her to paint "A Map of Middle-earth". Tolkien supplied her with copies of his draft maps for The Lord of the Rings, and annotated her copy of his son Christopher's 1954 map for The Fellowship of the Ring. Allen & Unwin published Baynes's map as a poster in 1970. It was decorated with a header and footer showing some of Tolkien's characters, and vignettes of some of his stories' locations. The poster map became "iconic" of Middle-earth.[22][23][24][25]

The scholar of English literature Paul Tankard comments that "Tolkien clearly admired Pauline Baynes' work, in certain ways and for certain purposes: for illustrations to his slighter and non-Middle-earthly tales, for vistas and for maps—but not for inside and alongside of the narrative of The Lord of the Rings."[13] In short, Tolkien liked her work and found it usefully decorative, but felt that it lacked the "noble or awe-inspiring" quality that Middle-earth illustrations needed, giving as an instance "her ridiculous picture of the dragon" in Farmer Giles of Ham.[13][26]

 
Tolkien liked Pauline Baynes's decorative illustrations for his minor works such as Farmer Giles of Ham, but thought her style unsuitable for use inside his major fantasy works, as it was not "noble or awe-inspiring"; he found her dragon (pictured) "ridiculous".[13]

Margrethe II of Denmark edit

Crown Princess Margrethe (later Queen Margrethe II of Denmark), an accomplished and critically acclaimed painter, was inspired to create illustrations to The Lord of the Rings in the early 1970s. Tolkien liked her woodcut-style drawings, seeing in them a resemblance to the style of some of his own artwork.[27][28][14] In 1977, Margrethe's drawings were published in the Danish translation of the book, redrawn by the British artist Eric Fraser.[T 8]

 
Woodcut-style illustration of Éowyn fighting the Nazgul's fell beast at the Battle of the Pelennor Fields, by Margrethe II of Denmark. Tolkien liked her work, seeing in it a style resembling his own.[14]

Ted Nasmith edit

While still in high school, Ted Nasmith painted some illustrations for The Hobbit, and in 1972 mailed photographs of a selection of his artworks to Tolkien, including a gouache of The Unexpected Party at the start of The Hobbit.[g] Tolkien responded by letter a few weeks later, both praising the work and commenting that the rendition of Bilbo Baggins seemed a little too childlike. This encouraged Nasmith to strive for a more literal interpretation of Tolkien's works.[29] He later created the illustrations for some editions of The Silmarillion.[30]

Independent views edit

A Japanese view, 1965 edit

The Japanese artist Ryûichi Terashima [ja] (寺島竜一) made a set of drawings to illustrate Teiji Seta's 1965 translation of The Hobbit.[31] Robert Ellwood, writing in Mythlore, admired the work, with the characters treated "with the seriousness to which the epic dimensions of Tolkien's work entitles them."[32] In his view, the characters "emerge in these sensitive line drawings as real, discrete personalities".[32]

 
Ryûichi Terashima's drawing of Gandalf and Bilbo at Bag End. His representations of these characters has been praised for making them "real, discrete personalities".[32]

An unrealised Maurice Sendak set, 1967 edit

The children's book author Maurice Sendak was invited to illustrate a deluxe edition of The Hobbit in 1967. He created one surviving sample drawing, of Gandalf with Bilbo smoking outside Bag End.[33] According to the artist Tony DiTerlizzi in the Los Angeles Times, Sendak sent two drawings to Tolkien, the one that survives and one of Mirkwood's wood-elves dancing by moonlight. DiTerlizzi finds the work subtle and masterly, with "heavy crosshatching used to weigh down a world-weary Gandalf contrasted with the open, airy line work that renders the jovial Bilbo."[34] In DiTerlizzi's version of events, the editor accidentally labelled Sendak's wood-elves as "hobbits", which annoyed Tolkien, and he rejected the drawings, angering Sendak. A meeting was arranged to resolve the matter, but Sendak had a heart attack and the publisher cancelled the project. DiTerlizzi offers another possible explanation, namely that Tolkien did not want The Hobbit to be thought of as a children's story.[34][h]

 
Drawing by Maurice Sendak of Gandalf and Bilbo at Bag End, 1967. The contrasting treatment of the two characters has been described as subtle and masterly.[34]

Through Slavic eyes, 1976 onwards edit

Soviet era Russian illustrations of The Hobbit were according to Open Culture "traditionally stylized ... angular, friendlier, almost cartoonish". Mikhail Belomlinsky [ru]'s (Беломлинский, Михаил Самуилович) illustrations for Natalya Rakhmanova [ru]'s (Рахманова, Наталия Леонидовна) 1976 translation include the three Trolls with full beards, dark clothes, and bare feet, holding tankards and arguing over how to cook Bilbo.[35] The Hobbit is shown with hairy legs rather than just hairy feet; the Russian word нога ("noga") can mean either "leg" or "foot".[36] Belomlinsky stated that his Bilbo character was based on the actor Yevgeny Leonov, who he described as "good-natured, plump, with hairy legs."[37]

 
Mikhail Belomlinsky [ru]'s somewhat cartoonish Soviet-era Russian illustration of the three Trolls arguing over how to cook Bilbo, 1976[35]

In 1981, the Russian artist Alexander Korotich, known for his "Zuza" series of fairy tales, made a series of scraperboard engravings of The Lord of the Rings. Many were lost; those that survived were eventually exhibited in 2013.[38]

In 1979, the Czech artist and animator Jiří Šalamoun [cz], known for his children's television series Maxipes Fík starring a cartoon dog,[39] illustrated Frantisek Vrba's translation of The Hobbit. Šalamoun adapted his usual children's style to what he thought would suit the book; Janka Kaščáková comments that the result is "rather far ... from Tolkien's original."[40]

 
Detail of Jiří Šalamoun's rather wayward illustration of An Unexpected Party for the 1979 Czech translation of The Hobbit.[40]

The Russian artist Sergey Yuhimov (Сергей Юхимов) illustrated a 1993 edition of The Lord of the Rings[41] in the style of the icons of the Russian Orthodox Church. This use of symbolism may have added layers of meaning to those already intended by Tolkien.[42] Open Culture has described the work as "vivid, stylistically Medieval, religious-icon-saturated".[43]

 
Sergei Yuhimov illustrated a 1993 Russian translation of The Lord of the Rings in the style of the icons of the Russian Orthodox Church.[43]

Covers and calendars, 1978 onwards edit

Paul R. Gregory's Middle-earth paintings, created from 1978 onwards, have appeared on the covers of some 30 rock music albums;[44][45] the artist Ruth Lacon has however described Gregory's work as inaccurate, departing from Tolkien's text.[46] Tim and Greg Hildebrandt, usually called the Brothers Hildebrandt, were known especially for their Tolkien Calendars, which appeared between 1976 and 2006.[47][i] The illustrator John Howe said he got "a real spark" from the Hildebrandts' calendars, as they showed him that Tolkien's novels could be illustrated.[48]

Calligraphy and illumination, 1990 edit

Tom Loback contributed to the appreciation of Tolkien's legendarium both through his artwork and with scholarly study.[49] The Tolkien scholar Bradford Lee Eden commented that Loback's work was "unique" in featuring both Tolkien's scripts (Cirth and Tengwar) and Elvish languages (both Quenya and Sindarin[50]) in his art, and in his imitation of the style of medieval illuminated manuscripts.[51] His artistic vision of The Silmarillion has been celebrated alongside that of other Tolkien illustrators: in 1990, Mythlore set Loback and three others the task of illustrating the confrontation between the maker of the Silmarils, Fëanor, and his half-brother Fingolfin.[52]

Fantasy and botany, 2017 edit

Tolkien stated that he had a "special fascination" for illustrated botany books, and for the "unfamiliar flora[s]" of new areas. He said he had not seen anything quite like Niphredil, because "those imagined flowers are lit by a light" of another world; the flower would be "simply a delicate kin of a snowdrop".[T 10] The illustrator Graham A. Judd has prepared woodcut illustrations to support his father, the botanist Walter S. Judd's 2017 Flora of Middle-earth. According to the Tolkien scholar Martin Simonson, the woodcuts "combine accurate representations of the morphological features of most of the plants under study with symbolically rendered scenes from the legendarium, and they thus manage to convey the mixed essence of the book as such: art and science."[53][54]

 
Detail of woodcut illustration of the fictional Niphredil flower, based on a snowdrop, with inset vignette of Aragorn and Arwen on a lawn of the flowers on Cerin Amroth, for the 2017 Flora of Middle-earth, by Graham A. Judd.[54] The image thus combines fantasy and botany, "art and science".[53]

Classical realism, 2019 edit

The American artist Donato Giancola describes himself as "classical-abstract-realist working with science fiction and fantasy".[55] His many paintings of J. R. R. Tolkien's fantasy world have led Jeff LaSala, writing on Tor.com, to label him "the Caravaggio of Middle-earth" and a "Tolkien neoclassicist".[56] LaSala suggests that Giancola's "The Tower of Cirith Ungol", with an Orc tormenting a naked Frodo, could almost be by the Anglo-Swiss artist Henry Fuseli (1741–1825), known for his depictions of the supernatural.[56]

 
Donato Giancola's neoclassical painting The Tower of Cirith Ungol has being likened to the dramatic works of Caravaggio or Henry Fuseli.[56]

The effect of Peter Jackson's film trilogy: 2001–2003 and after edit

 
Peter Jackson's films of The Lord of the Rings created a stereotyped image of Middle-earth and its peoples (the cosplay fans here are dressed as the Elf Galadriel, a Nazgul, and the Wizard Gandalf), shared by Tolkien fans and artists alike.[57]

Concept art edit

The Tolkien illustrators John Howe and Alan Lee became well-known by the end of the 20th century for their Middle-earth artwork — Lee for illustrated editions of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings,[58][59] and Howe for the cover artwork to several Tolkien publications. Both men worked as concept artists in the creation of Peter Jackson's 2001–2003 The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, their designs leading directly to those in the films.[58][j] In 2004, Lee won an Academy Award for Best Art Direction on the film The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.[60] Nasmith had been invited to work as a concept artist for Peter Jackson's films but he had declined.[61]

From fan art to recognised artistry edit

The films attracted a large audience, making the artistic conception of Jackson's artists influential, indeed creating a stereotyped image of Middle-earth and its races of Elves, Dwarves, Orcs and Hobbits shared by Tolkien fans and artists alike.[57] The German illustrator Anke Eißmann had already become known for her Tolkien artwork, starting out as fan art,[62] such as for the German Tolkien Society's Der Flammifer von Westernis from 1991.[63][64] She made numerous paintings of scenes from The Silmarillion.[65] Eißmann illustrated Timothy Furnish's 2016 book High Towers and Strong Places: A Political History of Middle-earth in a way that, in Mike Foster's opinion, had been influenced by Peter Jackson's films.[66]

 
Anke Eißmann's painting The Parting (of Beren from Lúthien), as narrated in The Silmarillion. Her work has been described as influenced by Peter Jackson's films.[66]

Jenny Dolfen has made a series of watercolour paintings of scenes from The Silmarillion.[67] She has been described as the best-known of the many self-taught Middle-earth artists; Aurore Noury comments that her fame among Tolkien fans has given her a hybrid status, being both a self-taught fan artist and a recognised and published artist.[68] Dolfen has won three awards from The Tolkien Society for her paintings, namely in 2014 for "Eärendil the Mariner", a painting of Eärendil, a character from the first beginnings of Tolkien's legendarium;[k] in 2018 for "The Hunt", a depiction of Finrod Felagund going on a hunt with the Fëanoreans Maedhros and Maglor in Eastern Beleriand; and in 2020 the T-shirt design "The Professor", celebrating 50 years of The Tolkien Society, with Middle-earth characters and places within the outline of a pipe-smoking J. R. R. Tolkien.[67]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ One of Tolkien's drawings of hobbits is in the Bilbo Baggins article.
  2. ^ The image can be seen in the Horus Engels article.
  3. ^ The image can be seen in the Gollum article.
  4. ^ It was reprinted in the same 24 cm format in 1994 by Rabén Prisma, ISBN 978-9-15182-727-8.
  5. ^ The surviving images are The Old Forest; The Inn at Bree; The Pass on Mount Caradhras; The Bridge at Khazad-dûm; Galadriel at the Well in Lórien; The Great River; Treebeard with Pippin and Merry; Gandalf on the Tower of Orthanc; and The Dead Marshes, also called Sam and Frodo in Mordor with a Nazgûl. The image of Gollum that she had sent to Tolkien (and which he returned with the other samples) is lost.[13]
  6. ^ "The Ring Goes South" is a chapter in The Fellowship of the Ring, namely book 2, chapter 3.
  7. ^ The image can be seen in the Ted Nasmith article.
  8. ^ DiTerlizzi notes that in 1959, Tolkien wrote in a letter "I am not specially interested in children, and certainly not in writing for them."[T 9]
  9. ^ The 1976 calendar is illustrated in the Brothers Hildebrandt article.
  10. ^ Lee's Orthanc image is illustrated in that article.
  11. ^ The painting can be seen in the Jenny Dolfen article.

References edit

Primary edit

  1. ^ Tolkien 1977, Front and back cover
  2. ^ Tolkien 1983, "On Fairy-Stories", Note E.
  3. ^ a b Carpenter 2023, #27 to Houghton Mifflin, c. March or April 1938
  4. ^ a b c d e f Carpenter 2023, #116 to Allen & Unwin, 5 August 1948
  5. ^ a b Carpenter 2023, #107 to Sir Stanley Unwin, 7 December 1946
  6. ^ Carpenter 2023, #120 to Allen & Unwin, 16 March 1949
  7. ^ Carpenter 2023, #235 to Pauline Baynes, 6 December 1961
  8. ^ Tolkien 1977, Title page of The Folio Society edition
  9. ^ Carpenter 2023, #215 to Walter Allen, New Statesman, April 1959
  10. ^ Carpenter 2023, #312 to Amy Ronald, 16 November 1969

Secondary edit

  1. ^ a b Holmes 2013, pp. 27–32.
  2. ^ MacLeod & Smol 2017, pp. 115–131.
  3. ^ a b Lacon, Ruth (14 January 2012). "To Illustrate or Not to Illustrate? That is the Question…". Tolkien Library.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Agøy 2013, pp. 51–52.
  5. ^ Hammond & Scull 1995, p. 98.
  6. ^ a b Blok 2011, p. 15.
  7. ^ Collier, Pieter (8 March 2011). "A Tolkien Tapestry: Pictures to accompany The Lord of the Rings". Tolkien Library. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
  8. ^ Blok 2011, p. 8, 27.
  9. ^ a b c Blok 2011, pp. Slipcase, Foreword
  10. ^ Blok 2011, p. 9.
  11. ^ Blok 2011, p. 26.
  12. ^ Noury 2020, Note 7.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Tankard, Paul (2017). ""Akin to my own Inspiration": Mary Fairburn and the Art of Middle-earth". Tolkien Studies. 14 (1). Project Muse: 133–154. doi:10.1353/tks.2017.0010. ISSN 1547-3163. S2CID 171811464.
  14. ^ a b c "One Queen to Rule Them All: Margrethe II of Denmark". National Museum of Women in the Arts. 25 February 2013. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  15. ^ Holownia, Olga (31 December 2014). "'Hell, what a chance to have a go at the classics': Tove Jansson's take on Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, The Hunting of the Snark, and The Hobbit". Barnboken. 37. doi:10.14811/clr.v37i0.191.
  16. ^ . Tove Jansson. 23 February 2023. Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 9 November 2023.
  17. ^ Sundmark, Björn (2020). "The Translation and Visualization of Tolkien's The Hobbit into Swedish, the Aesthetics of Fantasy, and Tove Jansson's Illustrations". Translating and Transmediating Children's Literature. Cham: Springer International. pp. 117–132. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-52527-9_7. ISBN 978-3-030-52526-2. S2CID 226550272.
  18. ^ a b Sundmark, Björn (2014). ""En hobbit och ett mumintroll skulle kunna mötas i bästa sämja": Receptionen av Bilbo, en hobbits äventyr (1962)" ["A hobbit and a moomintroll would be able to meet in complete harmony": Reception of 'Bilbo, en hobbits äventyr']. Barnboken (in Swedish). 37. The Swedish Institute for Children's Books. doi:10.14811/clr.v37i0.186. hdl:2043/20341. ISSN 0347-772X.
  19. ^ Tankard, Paul (14 September 2012). "An Unknown Vision of Middle-earth: Mary Fairburn: Tolkien Illustrator". Times Literary Supplement.
  20. ^ Collier, Pieter (26 March 2014). "Tolkien Calendar 2015 features artwork from artist Mary Fairburn from The Lord of the Rings". Tolkien Library. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
  21. ^ Tolkien, J. R. R.; Baynes, Pauline (illus.) (1962). The Adventures of Tom Bombadil. London: George Allen & Unwin.
  22. ^ McIlwaine 2018, p. 384.
  23. ^ Kennedy 2016.
  24. ^ Bodleian 2016.
  25. ^ Scull & Hammond 2017, pp. 112–113.
  26. ^ Hammond & Scull 2006b, volume 2, page 422.
  27. ^ Thygesen, Peter (Autumn 1999). . Scandinavian Review. Archived from the original on 26 May 2021. Retrieved 12 March 2006.
  28. ^ . Royalinsight.net. 16 April 1940. Archived from the original on 30 October 2011. Retrieved 3 February 2012.
  29. ^ . Radio Rivendell. 25 April 2012. Archived from the original on 5 May 2012. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  30. ^ Hoyt, Randy (1 January 2009). "Illustrating Tolkien: Ted Nasmith Interview". Journey to the Sea.
  31. ^ Tolkien, J. R. R.; Seta, Teiji (trans.); Terashima, Ryûichi E. (illus.) (1965). ホビットの冒険 (Hobitto no bōken) [Hobbit Adventure] (in Japanese). Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. OCLC 1267526396.
  32. ^ a b c Ellwood, Robert (1969). "The Japanese Hobbit". Mythlore. 1 (3). Article 2.
  33. ^ Marshall, Colin (10 March 2014). "The Only Drawing from Maurice Sendak's Short-Lived Attempt to Illustrate The Hobbit". Open Culture. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
  34. ^ a b c DiTerlizzi, Tony (25 March 2011). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 19 March 2013.
  35. ^ a b Blinderman, Ilia (March 2014). "Soviet-Era Illustrations Of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Hobbit (1976)". Open Culture. Retrieved 9 November 2023.
  36. ^ "нога in English". YourDictionary. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
  37. ^ Belomlinsky, Mikhail. [Book Review: Leonov 'plays' the Hobbit]. Russian Bazaar (in Russian). 2 (508). Archived from the original on 27 April 2014.
  38. ^ "Александр Коротич. Иллюстрации к произведениям Дж" [Р. Р. Толкина Alexander Korotich. Illustrations for the works of J. R. R. Tolkien]. Uraic.ru (in Russian). 2013. from the original on 18 October 2016. Retrieved 10 September 2023. The exhibition presents individual illustrations for 'The Lord of the Rings' by J. R. R. Tolkien, created by artist Alexander Korotich from the second half of the 1980s until mid-1997, when the folder with most of the sheets was lost, as well as a number of illustrations for the book J. R. R. Tolkien. Fairy tales by the publishing house 'Ural market', released in 1993.
  39. ^ "Maxipes Fík illustrator Jiří Šalamoun dies at 86". Radio Prague International. 1 April 2022. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
  40. ^ a b Kaščáková, Janka (2023). Kaščáková, Janka; Palatinus, David Levente (eds.). J.R.R. Tolkien in Central Europe. Taylor & Francis. Chapter 3: Mythologia Non Grata: Tolkien and Socialist Czechoslovakia. ISBN 978-1-003-40717-1.
  41. ^ Lebedev, Dmitry Leonidovich (2016). "Visualizations of John Tolkien's fantasy world". Yearbook of Eastern European Studies (6): 106–116. Summary
  42. ^ Merriner, Joel (2018). The Other Middle-earth: Intertextuality and Iconography in Sergei Iukhimov's Illustrations for The Lord of the Rings (Thesis). University of Plymouth. doi:10.24382/890.
  43. ^ a b Marshall, Colin (4 June 2014). "Illustrations of The Lord of the Rings in Russian Iconography Style (1993)". Open Culture. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
  44. ^ "Paul Raymond Gregory – Heavy Metal's Lord Of the Rings". Great Album Covers. 10 February 2013. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  45. ^ Gregory, Paul Raymond (1949). "The Death of Theoden". Peter Nahum at The Leicester Galleries. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
  46. ^ Lacon, Ruth (21 January 2013). "Review of Beyond Time and Place - The Art of Paul Raymond Gregory". Tolkien Library. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 April 2011.
  48. ^ . John Howe. Archived from the original on 6 January 2012. Retrieved 7 January 2012.
  49. ^ Croft, Janet Brennan (2015). "Notes: In Memoriam: Tom Loback in Mythlore". Mythlore. 33 (2). Article 13.
  50. ^ "Tom Loback". Elvish Linguistic Fellowship. Retrieved 5 February 2023. (four pages)
  51. ^ Eden, Bradford Lee (2016). "Subcreation at work: the Art of Tom Loback". The C.S. Lewis & Friends Colloquium (10).
  52. ^ Wynne, Patrick; Loback, Tom; DiSante, Paula; Beach, Sarah (1990). "'Fëanor Fronts Fingolfin': Artistic Visions of Four Artists". Mythlore. 17 (2). Article 3.
  53. ^ a b Simonson, Martin (2017). "[Review] Flora of Middle-earth (2017) by Walter S. Judd and Graham A. Judd". Journal of Tolkien Research. 4 (2). article 9.
  54. ^ a b Judd, Walter S.; Judd, Graham A. (2017). Flora of Middle-Earth: Plants of J.R.R. Tolkien's Legendarium. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-027631-7.
  55. ^ . Magic the Gathering. 10 April 2003. Archived from the original on 21 April 2003.
  56. ^ a b c LaSala, Jeff (22 April 2019). "Donato Giancola Is the Caravaggio of Middle-earth". Tor.com. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  57. ^ a b Noury 2020, Note 9.
  58. ^ a b Svitil 2007, pp. 75–76.
  59. ^ GoodKnight, Glen H. (1992). "Reviews: The Ring Goes Grey". Mythlore. 18 (3): 55, Article 14.
  60. ^ . Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on 19 February 2006. Retrieved 29 May 2006.
  61. ^ Shepherd, Wendy (3 February 2004). . Dreamish.com. Archived from the original on 9 February 2004.
  62. ^ Manifold, Marjorie C. (2005). "Life as theater and theater as life: Art expressions of information-age youth". Journal of Cultural Research in Art Education. 25: 1.
  63. ^ Gand, André (21 November 2009). . Tolkien Bücher. Archived from the original on 14 March 2010. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  64. ^ (in German). German Tolkien Society. Archived from the original on 14 March 2010. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  65. ^ LaSala, Jeff (14 September 2016). "Lúthien: Tolkien's Badass Elf Princess". Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  66. ^ a b Foster, Mike (2016). "Review: 'High Towers and Strong Places'". Mythlore. 35 (1). Article 10.
  67. ^ a b "Awards - Previous Winners". The Tolkien Society. 29 October 2016. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
  68. ^ Noury 2020, Note 11.

Sources edit

illustrating, middle, earth, since, publication, tolkien, hobbit, 1937, artists, including, tolkien, himself, have, sought, capture, aspects, middle, earth, fantasy, novels, paintings, drawings, followed, lifetime, artists, whose, work, liked, such, pauline, b. Since the publication of J R R Tolkien s The Hobbit in 1937 artists including Tolkien himself have sought to capture aspects of Middle earth fantasy novels in paintings and drawings He was followed in his lifetime by artists whose work he liked such as Pauline Baynes Mary Fairburn Queen Margrethe II of Denmark and Ted Nasmith and by some whose work he rejected such as Horus Engels for the German edition of The Hobbit Tolkien had strong views on illustration of fantasy especially in the case of his own works His recorded opinions range from his rejection of the use of images in his 1936 essay On Fairy Stories to agreeing the case for decorative images for certain purposes and his actual creation of images to accompany the text in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings Commentators including Ruth Lacon and Pieter Collier have described his views on illustration as contradictory and his requirements as being as fastidious as his editing of his novels Gandalf fighting the Balrog on the bridge of Khazad dum Scraperboard by Alexander Korotich 1981 After Tolkien s death in 1973 many artists have created illustrations of Middle earth characters and landscapes in media ranging from Alexander Korotich s scraperboard depictions to Margrete II of Denmark s woodcut style drawings Sergey Yuhimov s Russian Orthodox icon style representations and Donato Giancola s neoclassical oil paintings Peter Jackson s 2001 2003 film trilogy of The Lord of the Rings and later of The Hobbit made use of concept art by John Howe and Alan Lee the resulting images of Middle earth and the story s characters have strongly influenced subsequent representations of Tolkien s work Jenny Dolfen has specialised in making watercolour paintings of The Silmarillion winning three awards from The Tolkien Society Graham A Judd has illustrated his father s book on the Flora of Middle earth with woodcuts showing both the flowers and the scenes associated with them in the legendarium Contents 1 Tolkien s artwork 2 Tolkien s views on illustration 2 1 Destroy useful ambiguity 2 2 Could work if well drawn 2 3 Must be in keeping with the text 2 4 Should depict the noble and the heroic 2 5 Should leave freedom for imagination 2 6 Contradictory opinions 3 In dialogue with Tolkien 1937 1973 3 1 Tove Jansson 1962 3 2 Mary Fairburn 1968 3 3 Pauline Baynes 3 4 Margrethe II of Denmark 3 5 Ted Nasmith 4 Independent views 4 1 A Japanese view 1965 4 2 An unrealised Maurice Sendak set 1967 4 3 Through Slavic eyes 1976 onwards 4 4 Covers and calendars 1978 onwards 4 5 Calligraphy and illumination 1990 4 6 Fantasy and botany 2017 4 7 Classical realism 2019 5 The effect of Peter Jackson s film trilogy 2001 2003 and after 5 1 Concept art 5 2 From fan art to recognised artistry 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Primary 8 2 Secondary 8 3 SourcesTolkien s artwork editMain article Tolkien s artwork J R R Tolkien accompanied his Middle earth fantasy writings with a wide variety of non narrative materials including paintings and drawings calligraphy and maps In his lifetime some of his artworks were included in his novels The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings others were used on the covers of different editions of these books and later on the cover of The Silmarillion T 1 Posthumously collections of his artworks have been published and academics have begun to evaluate him as an artist as well as an author 1 2 Tolkien s views on illustration editTolkien held strong opinions on illustrating fantasy especially of his own works but his statements made at different times are not easy to reconcile into a single point of view 3 4 Destroy useful ambiguity edit Further information Tolkien s ambiguity In his 1936 essay On Fairy Stories Tolkien wrote that However good in themselves illustrations do little good to fairy stories 4 T 2 He argued that by giving somewhat generic descriptions in words the author leaves freedom for the reader s imagination The Tolkien scholar Nils Agoy suggests that in The Lord of the Rings Tolkien makes frequent use of ambiguity for exactly this reason 4 Tolkien s illustrations for The Hobbit provide in the words of the Tolkien scholars Wayne Hammond and Christina Scull backgrounds on which readers can paint their own mental pictures directed by a text but not constrained by too specific an image 5 Could work if well drawn edit The 1938 American edition of The Hobbit was illustrated with five of Tolkien s own watercolour paintings 1 Tolkien was at that time willing to have images in the actual text of the novel illustrating specific episodes of the narrative He commented in a 1938 letter to his American publishers Houghton Mifflin who were looking for illustrations for their forthcoming edition of The Hobbit that they should seek an artist who can draw human figures as his own drawings of hobbits were an unsafe guide some of them very ill drawn T 3 a He mentions too that there could be special illustrations of episodes in the story where the hobbit Bilbo might appear wearing boots which he says Bilbo acquired in Rivendell but in the other illustrations he should be drawn with bare feet T 3 Must be in keeping with the text edit nbsp Tolkien thought that Milein Cosman s illustrations unhelpfully resembled the fashionable Edward Ardizzone s work example pictured T 4 In 1946 Tolkien voiced his objections to Horus Engels s illustrations for a German edition of The Hobbit He described the work as having certain merits but too Disnified for my taste Bilbo with a dribbling nose and Gandalf as a figure of vulgar fun rather than the Odinic wanderer that I think of T 5 b Tolkien felt that the requirements of a good illustration were not the same as for being a respected or fashionable artist When Allen amp Unwin were working with the artist Milein Cosman on illustrations for Farmer Giles of Ham in 1948 Tolkien described the sample drawings as resembling the work of Feliks Topolski or Edward Ardizzone commenting that he wasn t much interested in their fashionableness T 4 That did not make up in his opinion for their lack of resemblance to their text T 4 He stated among more detailed objections that the artist should have located the illustrations in or near Oxfordshire that the trees were poorly drawn and that the dragon was absurd Ridiculously coy and quite incapable of performing any of the tasks laid on him by the author T 4 In short he found Cosman s samples wholly out of keeping with the style or manner of the text T 4 By 1949 Allen amp Unwin had found another artist to illustrate Farmer Giles of Ham Pauline Baynes Tolkien expressed delight at the result writing that the images were more than illustrations they are a collateral theme explaining that they reduced my text to a commentary on the drawings T 6 Should depict the noble and the heroic edit Tolkien met the Dutch artist Cor Blok in 1961 6 He liked the five paintings that he saw enough to purchase two of them Battle of the Hornburg II hung in the front hall of his house to welcome visitors 7 The Dead Marshes too found a place in his house Blok later gave Tolkien a third painting Dunharrow out of his 149 The Lord of the Rings works 8 Tolkien wrote to his publisher Rayner Unwin that he found Blok s paintings most attractive especially the Hornburg image He thought the other works attractive as pictures but bad as illustrations he doubted whether any living artist of talent would even try to depict the noble and the heroic elements that he felt central to his work 9 All the same when asked in December 1962 who might be able to illustrate a deluxe edition of The Lord of the Rings as a set of six volumes Tolkien proposed Blok and Pauline Baynes 10 Blok added in 2011 that the 20th century had created two stereotypes of the noble and the heroic totalitarian hero figures such as the Heroes of Labour of Stalinist Art or the bulging muscles and breasts of the superheroes of comic books He commented that neither are suitable for illustrating Tolkien and that the two approaches had made it hard for artists of other sorts to represent heroism even on a small scale 11 nbsp Detail of Cor Blok s painting Battle of the Hornburg II that Tolkien liked enough to purchase It was the only one of Blok s Middle earth images that worked for Tolkien as an illustration as opposed to a stand alone painting 9 Should leave freedom for imagination edit Tolkien told Blok that he was not in favour of illustrated editions 6 However they agreed that an illustrator should omit anything non essential from an image 4 In a letter to Baynes who had by then illustrated several of his minor works Tolkien similarly mentioned his objections to illustration but stated that a case could be made for illustration or decoration applied to small things T 7 Agoy comments that Tolkien s remarks to these artists are not unambiguous but taken together suggest that he believed that freedom should be left for the reader 4 Contradictory opinions edit The artist Ruth Lacon argues that Tolkien s actions preparing illustrations for his own works conflict with what he wrote about their use She suggests that images are especially useful in complex texts like The Silmarillion 3 Pieter Collier who edited a book of Cor Blok s illustrations for The Lord of the Rings commented that Tolkien s criteria for excellence in illustration were as fastidious as those for selecting le mot juste in his writing 9 The scholar of literature Aurore Noury comments that one of the paradoxes around Tolkien is that he hoped his subcreated world would live on after him but that he imposed strict requirements on anyone who sought to illustrate his novels 12 Some of Tolkien s views on illustration 13 4 Style Application Example artists Inaccuratefailing to match text tone wrong Unusable Horus Engels T 5 Milein Cosman T 4 Decorativeattractive but without heroic tone Minor non Middle earth tales vistas maps Pauline BaynesTolkien s own artwork Illustrativewith noble or awe inspiring quality In or alongside the text Margrethe II of Denmark 14 Mary FairburnIn dialogue with Tolkien 1937 1973 editTove Jansson 1962 edit nbsp Tove Jansson is better known for her Moomin characters The Swedish speaking Finnish author novelist painter and illustrator Tove Jansson who had written and illustrated the Moomin books illustrated Swedish and Finnish translations of The Hobbit Among these is a very large Gollum for the 1962 Swedish translation 15 Tolkien was surprised to see a giant monster towering above Bilbo but realised that the book did not say how small Gollum was c He edited the second edition to state explicitly that Gollum was a small slimy creature 16 The scholar of literature Bjorn Sundmark states that Jansson s work helped to define how Middle earth fantasy could be depicted visually 17 He adds that the edition with her illustrations was not reprinted for many years d even though reviewers and Tolkienists liked Jansson s expressive 18 images Sundmark suggests that the reason was that in the 1960s a new more realistic style became the norm for fantasy art 18 Mary Fairburn 1968 edit In May 1968 the English artist Mary Fairburn sent Tolkien several illustrations of The Lord of the Rings mostly in coloured ink He replied that they were splendid They are better pictures in themselves and also show far more attention to the text than any that have yet been submitted to me 13 He added I am beginning to think that an illustrated edition of The Lord of the Rings might be a good thing 13 The project went no further as Tolkien aged 76 injured his leg and was in the process of moving house from Oxford to Bournemouth and the removals team seriously disorganised his papers In October 1968 he wrote to Fairburn that his publisher Rayner Unwin would take some months to decide whether to publish an illustrated edition of The Lord of the Rings mentioning that black and white illustrations were more likely She states that she created black and white versions of 26 of her paintings one for each chapter of The Fellowship of the Ring and the first four chapters of The Two Towers the last being Treebeard Fairburn lost many of the illustrations in repeated house moves nine survive e of which one a coloured painting of Galadriel at the Well in Lorien came into Tolkien s possession 13 Fairburn s illustrations remained unknown to scholars until 2012 19 13 her work was finally published in the Tolkien Calendar 2015 20 nbsp Detail of The Pass on Mount Caradhras Mary Fairburn s 1968 image for The Ring Goes South f Tolkien called her work splendid liking it enough to think of an illustrated The Lord of the Rings 13 Pauline Baynes edit Further information Pauline Baynes and A Map of Middle earth Pauline Baynes created the illustrations for some of Tolkien s minor works such as the 1949 Farmer Giles of Ham and the 1962 The Adventures of Tom Bombadil 21 In 1969 Tolkien s publisher Allen amp Unwin commissioned her to paint A Map of Middle earth Tolkien supplied her with copies of his draft maps for The Lord of the Rings and annotated her copy of his son Christopher s 1954 map for The Fellowship of the Ring Allen amp Unwin published Baynes s map as a poster in 1970 It was decorated with a header and footer showing some of Tolkien s characters and vignettes of some of his stories locations The poster map became iconic of Middle earth 22 23 24 25 The scholar of English literature Paul Tankard comments that Tolkien clearly admired Pauline Baynes work in certain ways and for certain purposes for illustrations to his slighter and non Middle earthly tales for vistas and for maps but not for inside and alongside of the narrative of The Lord of the Rings 13 In short Tolkien liked her work and found it usefully decorative but felt that it lacked the noble or awe inspiring quality that Middle earth illustrations needed giving as an instance her ridiculous picture of the dragon in Farmer Giles of Ham 13 26 nbsp Tolkien liked Pauline Baynes s decorative illustrations for his minor works such as Farmer Giles of Ham but thought her style unsuitable for use inside his major fantasy works as it was not noble or awe inspiring he found her dragon pictured ridiculous 13 Margrethe II of Denmark edit Crown Princess Margrethe later Queen Margrethe II of Denmark an accomplished and critically acclaimed painter was inspired to create illustrations to The Lord of the Rings in the early 1970s Tolkien liked her woodcut style drawings seeing in them a resemblance to the style of some of his own artwork 27 28 14 In 1977 Margrethe s drawings were published in the Danish translation of the book redrawn by the British artist Eric Fraser T 8 nbsp Woodcut style illustration of Eowyn fighting the Nazgul s fell beast at the Battle of the Pelennor Fields by Margrethe II of Denmark Tolkien liked her work seeing in it a style resembling his own 14 Ted Nasmith edit While still in high school Ted Nasmith painted some illustrations for The Hobbit and in 1972 mailed photographs of a selection of his artworks to Tolkien including a gouache of The Unexpected Party at the start of The Hobbit g Tolkien responded by letter a few weeks later both praising the work and commenting that the rendition of Bilbo Baggins seemed a little too childlike This encouraged Nasmith to strive for a more literal interpretation of Tolkien s works 29 He later created the illustrations for some editions of The Silmarillion 30 Independent views editA Japanese view 1965 edit The Japanese artist Ryuichi Terashima ja 寺島竜一 made a set of drawings to illustrate Teiji Seta s 1965 translation of The Hobbit 31 Robert Ellwood writing in Mythlore admired the work with the characters treated with the seriousness to which the epic dimensions of Tolkien s work entitles them 32 In his view the characters emerge in these sensitive line drawings as real discrete personalities 32 nbsp Ryuichi Terashima s drawing of Gandalf and Bilbo at Bag End His representations of these characters has been praised for making them real discrete personalities 32 An unrealised Maurice Sendak set 1967 edit The children s book author Maurice Sendak was invited to illustrate a deluxe edition of The Hobbit in 1967 He created one surviving sample drawing of Gandalf with Bilbo smoking outside Bag End 33 According to the artist Tony DiTerlizzi in the Los Angeles Times Sendak sent two drawings to Tolkien the one that survives and one of Mirkwood s wood elves dancing by moonlight DiTerlizzi finds the work subtle and masterly with heavy crosshatching used to weigh down a world weary Gandalf contrasted with the open airy line work that renders the jovial Bilbo 34 In DiTerlizzi s version of events the editor accidentally labelled Sendak s wood elves as hobbits which annoyed Tolkien and he rejected the drawings angering Sendak A meeting was arranged to resolve the matter but Sendak had a heart attack and the publisher cancelled the project DiTerlizzi offers another possible explanation namely that Tolkien did not want The Hobbit to be thought of as a children s story 34 h nbsp Drawing by Maurice Sendak of Gandalf and Bilbo at Bag End 1967 The contrasting treatment of the two characters has been described as subtle and masterly 34 Through Slavic eyes 1976 onwards edit Soviet era Russian illustrations of The Hobbit were according to Open Culture traditionally stylized angular friendlier almost cartoonish Mikhail Belomlinsky ru s Belomlinskij Mihail Samuilovich illustrations for Natalya Rakhmanova ru s Rahmanova Nataliya Leonidovna 1976 translation include the three Trolls with full beards dark clothes and bare feet holding tankards and arguing over how to cook Bilbo 35 The Hobbit is shown with hairy legs rather than just hairy feet the Russian word noga noga can mean either leg or foot 36 Belomlinsky stated that his Bilbo character was based on the actor Yevgeny Leonov who he described as good natured plump with hairy legs 37 nbsp Mikhail Belomlinsky ru s somewhat cartoonish Soviet era Russian illustration of the three Trolls arguing over how to cook Bilbo 1976 35 In 1981 the Russian artist Alexander Korotich known for his Zuza series of fairy tales made a series of scraperboard engravings of The Lord of the Rings Many were lost those that survived were eventually exhibited in 2013 38 Scraperboard illustrations by Alexander Korotich nbsp Frodo and Sam guided by Gollum through the Dead Marshes nbsp Gwaihir the Eagle rescues Gandalf from Orthanc nbsp Tom Bombadil frees the Hobbits from Old Man Willow In 1979 the Czech artist and animator Jiri Salamoun cz known for his children s television series Maxipes Fik starring a cartoon dog 39 illustrated Frantisek Vrba s translation of The Hobbit Salamoun adapted his usual children s style to what he thought would suit the book Janka Kascakova comments that the result is rather far from Tolkien s original 40 nbsp Detail of Jiri Salamoun s rather wayward illustration of An Unexpected Party for the 1979 Czech translation of The Hobbit 40 The Russian artist Sergey Yuhimov Sergej Yuhimov illustrated a 1993 edition of The Lord of the Rings 41 in the style of the icons of the Russian Orthodox Church This use of symbolism may have added layers of meaning to those already intended by Tolkien 42 Open Culture has described the work as vivid stylistically Medieval religious icon saturated 43 nbsp Sergei Yuhimov illustrated a 1993 Russian translation of The Lord of the Rings in the style of the icons of the Russian Orthodox Church 43 Covers and calendars 1978 onwards edit Further information Tolkien Calendars Paul R Gregory s Middle earth paintings created from 1978 onwards have appeared on the covers of some 30 rock music albums 44 45 the artist Ruth Lacon has however described Gregory s work as inaccurate departing from Tolkien s text 46 Tim and Greg Hildebrandt usually called the Brothers Hildebrandt were known especially for their Tolkien Calendars which appeared between 1976 and 2006 47 i The illustrator John Howe said he got a real spark from the Hildebrandts calendars as they showed him that Tolkien s novels could be illustrated 48 Calligraphy and illumination 1990 edit Further information Loback s drawings on Commons Tom Loback contributed to the appreciation of Tolkien s legendarium both through his artwork and with scholarly study 49 The Tolkien scholar Bradford Lee Eden commented that Loback s work was unique in featuring both Tolkien s scripts Cirth and Tengwar and Elvish languages both Quenya and Sindarin 50 in his art and in his imitation of the style of medieval illuminated manuscripts 51 His artistic vision of The Silmarillion has been celebrated alongside that of other Tolkien illustrators in 1990 Mythlore set Loback and three others the task of illustrating the confrontation between the maker of the Silmarils Feanor and his half brother Fingolfin 52 Medieval style Silmarillion images with Elvish calligraphy by Tom Loback nbsp Ulmo Lord of Waters saves Voronwe nbsp Feanor maker of the Silmarils confronts his half brother Fingolfin nbsp The Fall of Turgon s Tower during the Fall of Gondolin Fantasy and botany 2017 edit Further information Plants in Middle earth Tolkien stated that he had a special fascination for illustrated botany books and for the unfamiliar flora s of new areas He said he had not seen anything quite like Niphredil because those imagined flowers are lit by a light of another world the flower would be simply a delicate kin of a snowdrop T 10 The illustrator Graham A Judd has prepared woodcut illustrations to support his father the botanist Walter S Judd s 2017 Flora of Middle earth According to the Tolkien scholar Martin Simonson the woodcuts combine accurate representations of the morphological features of most of the plants under study with symbolically rendered scenes from the legendarium and they thus manage to convey the mixed essence of the book as such art and science 53 54 nbsp Detail of woodcut illustration of the fictional Niphredil flower based on a snowdrop with inset vignette of Aragorn and Arwen on a lawn of the flowers on Cerin Amroth for the 2017 Flora of Middle earth by Graham A Judd 54 The image thus combines fantasy and botany art and science 53 Classical realism 2019 edit The American artist Donato Giancola describes himself as classical abstract realist working with science fiction and fantasy 55 His many paintings of J R R Tolkien s fantasy world have led Jeff LaSala writing on Tor com to label him the Caravaggio of Middle earth and a Tolkien neoclassicist 56 LaSala suggests that Giancola s The Tower of Cirith Ungol with an Orc tormenting a naked Frodo could almost be by the Anglo Swiss artist Henry Fuseli 1741 1825 known for his depictions of the supernatural 56 nbsp Donato Giancola s neoclassical painting The Tower of Cirith Ungol has being likened to the dramatic works of Caravaggio or Henry Fuseli 56 The effect of Peter Jackson s film trilogy 2001 2003 and after edit nbsp Peter Jackson s films of The Lord of the Rings created a stereotyped image of Middle earth and its peoples the cosplay fans here are dressed as the Elf Galadriel a Nazgul and the Wizard Gandalf shared by Tolkien fans and artists alike 57 Concept art edit Further information Production of The Lord of the Rings film series Art design The Tolkien illustrators John Howe and Alan Lee became well known by the end of the 20th century for their Middle earth artwork Lee for illustrated editions of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings 58 59 and Howe for the cover artwork to several Tolkien publications Both men worked as concept artists in the creation of Peter Jackson s 2001 2003 The Lord of the Rings film trilogy their designs leading directly to those in the films 58 j In 2004 Lee won an Academy Award for Best Art Direction on the film The Lord of the Rings The Return of the King 60 Nasmith had been invited to work as a concept artist for Peter Jackson s films but he had declined 61 From fan art to recognised artistry edit The films attracted a large audience making the artistic conception of Jackson s artists influential indeed creating a stereotyped image of Middle earth and its races of Elves Dwarves Orcs and Hobbits shared by Tolkien fans and artists alike 57 The German illustrator Anke Eissmann had already become known for her Tolkien artwork starting out as fan art 62 such as for the German Tolkien Society s Der Flammifer von Westernis from 1991 63 64 She made numerous paintings of scenes from The Silmarillion 65 Eissmann illustrated Timothy Furnish s 2016 book High Towers and Strong Places A Political History of Middle earth in a way that in Mike Foster s opinion had been influenced by Peter Jackson s films 66 nbsp Anke Eissmann s painting The Parting of Beren from Luthien as narrated in The Silmarillion Her work has been described as influenced by Peter Jackson s films 66 Jenny Dolfen has made a series of watercolour paintings of scenes from The Silmarillion 67 She has been described as the best known of the many self taught Middle earth artists Aurore Noury comments that her fame among Tolkien fans has given her a hybrid status being both a self taught fan artist and a recognised and published artist 68 Dolfen has won three awards from The Tolkien Society for her paintings namely in 2014 for Earendil the Mariner a painting of Earendil a character from the first beginnings of Tolkien s legendarium k in 2018 for The Hunt a depiction of Finrod Felagund going on a hunt with the Feanoreans Maedhros and Maglor in Eastern Beleriand and in 2020 the T shirt design The Professor celebrating 50 years of The Tolkien Society with Middle earth characters and places within the outline of a pipe smoking J R R Tolkien 67 See also editThe Annotated Hobbit including numerous covers and illustrations from translations of The Hobbit Inger Edelfeldt who made numerous cover illustrations for Swedish editions of Tolkien s books List of things named after J R R Tolkien and his works including astronomical objects companies genes ships places and species Middle earth in motion pictures including animated films of Tolkien s books Works inspired by J R R Tolkien including films books radio plays music and gamesNotes edit One of Tolkien s drawings of hobbits is in the Bilbo Baggins article The image can be seen in the Horus Engels article The image can be seen in the Gollum article It was reprinted in the same 24 cm format in 1994 by Raben Prisma ISBN 978 9 15182 727 8 The surviving images are The Old Forest The Inn at Bree The Pass on Mount Caradhras The Bridge at Khazad dum Galadriel at the Well in Lorien The Great River Treebeard with Pippin and Merry Gandalf on the Tower of Orthanc and The Dead Marshes also called Sam and Frodo in Mordor with a Nazgul The image of Gollum that she had sent to Tolkien and which he returned with the other samples is lost 13 The Ring Goes South is a chapter in The Fellowship of the Ring namely book 2 chapter 3 The image can be seen in the Ted Nasmith article DiTerlizzi notes that in 1959 Tolkien wrote in a letter I am not specially interested in children and certainly not in writing for them T 9 The 1976 calendar is illustrated in the Brothers Hildebrandt article Lee s Orthanc image is illustrated in that article The painting can be seen in the Jenny Dolfen article References editPrimary edit Tolkien 1977 Front and back cover Tolkien 1983 On Fairy Stories Note E a b Carpenter 2023 27 to Houghton Mifflin c March or April 1938 a b c d e f Carpenter 2023 116 to Allen amp Unwin 5 August 1948 a b Carpenter 2023 107 to Sir Stanley Unwin 7 December 1946 Carpenter 2023 120 to Allen amp Unwin 16 March 1949 Carpenter 2023 235 to Pauline Baynes 6 December 1961 Tolkien 1977 Title page of The Folio Society edition Carpenter 2023 215 to Walter Allen New Statesman April 1959 Carpenter 2023 312 to Amy Ronald 16 November 1969 Secondary edit a b Holmes 2013 pp 27 32 MacLeod amp Smol 2017 pp 115 131 a b Lacon Ruth 14 January 2012 To Illustrate or Not to Illustrate That is the Question Tolkien Library a b c d e f Agoy 2013 pp 51 52 Hammond amp Scull 1995 p 98 a b Blok 2011 p 15 Collier Pieter 8 March 2011 A Tolkien Tapestry Pictures to accompany The Lord of the Rings Tolkien Library Retrieved 7 November 2023 Blok 2011 p 8 27 a b c Blok 2011 pp Slipcase Foreword Blok 2011 p 9 Blok 2011 p 26 Noury 2020 Note 7 a b c d e f g h i j Tankard Paul 2017 Akin to my own Inspiration Mary Fairburn and the Art of Middle earth Tolkien Studies 14 1 Project Muse 133 154 doi 10 1353 tks 2017 0010 ISSN 1547 3163 S2CID 171811464 a b c One Queen to Rule Them All Margrethe II of Denmark National Museum of Women in the Arts 25 February 2013 Retrieved 4 November 2023 Holownia Olga 31 December 2014 Hell what a chance to have a go at the classics Tove Jansson s take on Alice s Adventures in Wonderland The Hunting of the Snark and The Hobbit Barnboken 37 doi 10 14811 clr v37i0 191 For me it was an adventure to illustrate J R R Tolkien s The Hobbit all you need to know about Tove Janssons criticised illustrations Tove Jansson 23 February 2023 Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 9 November 2023 Sundmark Bjorn 2020 The Translation and Visualization of Tolkien s The Hobbit into Swedish the Aesthetics of Fantasy and Tove Jansson s Illustrations Translating and Transmediating Children s Literature Cham Springer International pp 117 132 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 52527 9 7 ISBN 978 3 030 52526 2 S2CID 226550272 a b Sundmark Bjorn 2014 En hobbit och ett mumintroll skulle kunna motas i basta samja Receptionen av Bilbo en hobbits aventyr 1962 A hobbit and a moomintroll would be able to meet in complete harmony Reception of Bilbo en hobbits aventyr Barnboken in Swedish 37 The Swedish Institute for Children s Books doi 10 14811 clr v37i0 186 hdl 2043 20341 ISSN 0347 772X Tankard Paul 14 September 2012 An Unknown Vision of Middle earth Mary Fairburn Tolkien Illustrator Times Literary Supplement Collier Pieter 26 March 2014 Tolkien Calendar 2015 features artwork from artist Mary Fairburn from The Lord of the Rings Tolkien Library Retrieved 5 November 2023 Tolkien J R R Baynes Pauline illus 1962 The Adventures of Tom Bombadil London George Allen amp Unwin McIlwaine 2018 p 384 Kennedy 2016 Bodleian 2016 Scull amp Hammond 2017 pp 112 113 Hammond amp Scull 2006b volume 2 page 422 Thygesen Peter Autumn 1999 Queen Margrethe II Denmark s monarch for a modern age Scandinavian Review Archived from the original on 26 May 2021 Retrieved 12 March 2006 Margrethe and Henrik Biography Royalinsight net 16 April 1940 Archived from the original on 30 October 2011 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Ted Nasmith Radio Rivendell 25 April 2012 Archived from the original on 5 May 2012 Retrieved 3 February 2021 Hoyt Randy 1 January 2009 Illustrating Tolkien Ted Nasmith Interview Journey to the Sea Tolkien J R R Seta Teiji trans Terashima Ryuichi E illus 1965 ホビットの冒険 Hobitto no bōken Hobbit Adventure in Japanese Tokyo Iwanami Shoten OCLC 1267526396 a b c Ellwood Robert 1969 The Japanese Hobbit Mythlore 1 3 Article 2 Marshall Colin 10 March 2014 The Only Drawing from Maurice Sendak s Short Lived Attempt to Illustrate The Hobbit Open Culture Retrieved 12 November 2023 a b c DiTerlizzi Tony 25 March 2011 The Hobbit illustrated by Maurice Sendak The 1960s masterpiece that could have been Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 19 March 2013 a b Blinderman Ilia March 2014 Soviet Era Illustrations Of J R R Tolkien s The Hobbit 1976 Open Culture Retrieved 9 November 2023 noga in English YourDictionary Retrieved 12 November 2023 Belomlinsky Mikhail Knizhnoe obozrenie Leonov igraet Hobbita Book Review Leonov plays the Hobbit Russian Bazaar in Russian 2 508 Archived from the original on 27 April 2014 Aleksandr Korotich Illyustracii k proizvedeniyam Dzh R R Tolkina Alexander Korotich Illustrations for the works of J R R Tolkien Uraic ru in Russian 2013 Archived from the original on 18 October 2016 Retrieved 10 September 2023 The exhibition presents individual illustrations for The Lord of the Rings by J R R Tolkien created by artist Alexander Korotich from the second half of the 1980s until mid 1997 when the folder with most of the sheets was lost as well as a number of illustrations for the book J R R Tolkien Fairy tales by the publishing house Ural market released in 1993 Maxipes Fik illustrator Jiri Salamoun dies at 86 Radio Prague International 1 April 2022 Retrieved 13 November 2023 a b Kascakova Janka 2023 Kascakova Janka Palatinus David Levente eds J R R Tolkien in Central Europe Taylor amp Francis Chapter 3 Mythologia Non Grata Tolkien and Socialist Czechoslovakia ISBN 978 1 003 40717 1 Lebedev Dmitry Leonidovich 2016 Visualizations of John Tolkien s fantasy world Yearbook of Eastern European Studies 6 106 116 Summary Merriner Joel 2018 The Other Middle earth Intertextuality and Iconography in Sergei Iukhimov s Illustrations for The Lord of the Rings Thesis University of Plymouth doi 10 24382 890 a b Marshall Colin 4 June 2014 Illustrations of The Lord of the Rings in Russian Iconography Style 1993 Open Culture Retrieved 5 November 2023 Paul Raymond Gregory Heavy Metal s Lord Of the Rings Great Album Covers 10 February 2013 Retrieved 14 June 2020 Gregory Paul Raymond 1949 The Death of Theoden Peter Nahum at The Leicester Galleries Retrieved 12 June 2020 Lacon Ruth 21 January 2013 Review of Beyond Time and Place The Art of Paul Raymond Gregory Tolkien Library Retrieved 5 November 2023 The Art of The Brothers Hildebrandt Archived from the original on 29 April 2011 Biography John Howe Archived from the original on 6 January 2012 Retrieved 7 January 2012 Croft Janet Brennan 2015 Notes In Memoriam Tom Loback in Mythlore Mythlore 33 2 Article 13 Tom Loback Elvish Linguistic Fellowship Retrieved 5 February 2023 four pages Eden Bradford Lee 2016 Subcreation at work the Art of Tom Loback The C S Lewis amp Friends Colloquium 10 Wynne Patrick Loback Tom DiSante Paula Beach Sarah 1990 Feanor Fronts Fingolfin Artistic Visions of Four Artists Mythlore 17 2 Article 3 a b Simonson Martin 2017 Review Flora of Middle earth 2017 by Walter S Judd and Graham A Judd Journal of Tolkien Research 4 2 article 9 a b Judd Walter S Judd Graham A 2017 Flora of Middle Earth Plants of J R R Tolkien s Legendarium Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 027631 7 Interview Behind the Canvas Donato Giancola Magic the Gathering 10 April 2003 Archived from the original on 21 April 2003 a b c LaSala Jeff 22 April 2019 Donato Giancola Is the Caravaggio of Middle earth Tor com Retrieved 11 November 2023 a b Noury 2020 Note 9 a b Svitil 2007 pp 75 76 GoodKnight Glen H 1992 Reviews The Ring Goes Grey Mythlore 18 3 55 Article 14 76th Academy Awards Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on 19 February 2006 Retrieved 29 May 2006 Shepherd Wendy 3 February 2004 Interview With Ted Nasmith Tolkien Artist Dreamish com Archived from the original on 9 February 2004 Manifold Marjorie C 2005 Life as theater and theater as life Art expressions of information age youth Journal of Cultural Research in Art Education 25 1 Gand Andre 21 November 2009 Interview with Anke Eissmann Tolkien Bucher Archived from the original on 14 March 2010 Retrieved 4 November 2023 Deutsche Tolkien Gesellschaft in German German Tolkien Society Archived from the original on 14 March 2010 Retrieved 4 November 2023 LaSala Jeff 14 September 2016 Luthien Tolkien s Badass Elf Princess Retrieved 11 November 2023 a b Foster Mike 2016 Review High Towers and Strong Places Mythlore 35 1 Article 10 a b Awards Previous Winners The Tolkien Society 29 October 2016 Retrieved 12 June 2020 Noury 2020 Note 11 Sources edit Agoy Nils Ivar 2013 Vague or Vivid Descriptions in The Lord of the Rings Tolkien Studies 10 1 Project Muse 49 67 doi 10 1353 tks 2013 0011 ISSN 1547 3163 S2CID 170171727 Blok Cor 2011 Collier Pieter ed A Tolkien Tapestry HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 743798 6 Bodleian 13 June 2016 Rare map of Middle earth goes on display at the Bodleian Libraries Bodleian Library Retrieved 10 July 2020 Carpenter Humphrey ed 2023 1981 The Letters of J R R Tolkien Revised and Expanded Edition New York Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 35 865298 4 Hammond Wayne G Scull Christina 1995 J R R Tolkien Artist and Illustrator Illustrated by J R R Tolkien Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 395 74816 X Hammond Wayne G Scull Christina 2006b The J R R Tolkien Companion and Guide Reader s Guide London HarperCollins ISBN 0 007 14918 2 Holmes John R 2013 2007 Art and Illustrations by Tolkien In Drout Michael D C ed J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia Routledge pp 27 32 ISBN 978 0 415 86511 1 Kennedy Maev 3 May 2016 Tolkien annotated map of Middle earth acquired by Bodleian Library The Guardian Retrieved 10 July 2020 McIlwaine Catherine 2018 Tolkien Maker of Middle earth Bodleian Library p 384 ISBN 978 1851244850 MacLeod Jeffrey J Smol Anna 2017 Visualizing the Word Tolkien as Artist and Writer Tolkien Studies 14 1 115 131 doi 10 1353 tks 2017 0009 S2CID 171923300 Noury Aurore 2020 Ou se trouve la Terre du Milieu De l incarnation d un nouvel imaginaire collectif dans l espace quotidien Where is Middle earth On the incarnation of a new collective imagination in everyday space Actes du colloque 2020 du Laboratoire des Imaginaires in French pp 185 205 ISBN 978 2 9574143 0 7 hal 03884812 Scull Christina Hammond Wayne G 2017 The J R R Tolkien Companion and Guide Vol 2 2nd ed HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 0082 1454 8 Svitil Torene 2007 So You Want to Work in Animation amp Special Effects Enslow Publishing ISBN 978 0 7660 2737 4 Tolkien J R R 1977 Christopher Tolkien ed The Silmarillion Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 25730 2 Tolkien J R R 1983 The Monsters and the Critics and Other Essays London Allen amp Unwin OCLC 417591085 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Illustrating Middle earth amp oldid 1221890977, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.