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J. R. R. Tolkien's artwork

J. R. R. Tolkien's artwork was a key element of his creativity from the time when he began to write fiction. A professional philologist, J. R. R. Tolkien prepared a wide variety of materials to support his fiction, including illustrations for his Middle-earth fantasy books, facsimile artefacts, more or less "picturesque" maps, calligraphy, and sketches and paintings from life. Some of his artworks combined several of these elements.

Tolkien's illustration of the Doors of Durin for The Fellowship of the Ring, with Sindarin inscription in Tengwar script, both being his inventions. Despite his best efforts, this was the only drawing, other than maps and calligraphy, in the first edition of The Lord of the Rings.[1] In early editions it was printed in black on white rather than, as here and as Tolkien wished, in white on black.[T 1]

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. Posthumously, collections of his artworks have been published, and academics have begun to evaluate him as an artist as well as an author.

Early work: sketches edit

 
Ink drawing of "Quallington Carpenter", Eastbury, Berkshire, 1912[2]

Early in his life, Tolkien, taught by his mother, made many sketches and paintings from life. He drew with skill and depicted landscapes, buildings, trees, and flowers realistically. The one thing he admitted he could not draw was the human figure, where his attempts have been described as "cartoonish", as if "a different hand" was involved.[1][2] The scholars Wayne G. Hammond and Christina Scull describe his 1912 ink drawing of a cottage in Berkshire, "Quallington Carpenter", as "the most impressive" of these early works, its "sagging walls" and thatched roof "elaborately textured and shaded".[2]

Illustrations for his books edit

Tolkien's illustrations for his books consisted of drawings, paintings, artefacts, more or less "picturesque" maps, and calligraphy.[1]

The Hobbit edit

 
Watercolour painting The Hill: Hobbiton-across-the-Water used as the frontispiece of the first American edition of The Hobbit, 1938[1][T 2]

Tolkien's illustrations contributed to the effectiveness of his writings, though much of his oeuvre remained unpublished in his lifetime. However, the first British edition of The Hobbit in 1937 was published with ten of his black-and-white drawings.[1] In addition, it had as its frontispiece Tolkien's drawing The Hill: Hobbiton-across-the-Water. It depicts Bilbo Baggins's home village of Hobbiton in the Shire. The old mill, based on the mill at Sarehole, and The Water are in the foreground, an idealised English countryside in the middle distance, and The Hill and Bilbo's home Bag End (tunnelled into The Hill) in the background.[3] The American edition replaced the frontispiece with Tolkien's full-colour watercolour painting of the same scene; this was then used in later impressions in England also.[T 2] The American edition had in addition four of his watercolour paintings.[1]

The Lord of the Rings edit

The Book of Mazarbul edit

 
The first page from The Book of Mazarbul, in the form of a facsimile artefact created by Tolkien to support the story and bring readers into his fantasy. The publishers declined to include a reproduction of the artefact in the first edition of The Lord of the Rings.[1][T 3]

Tolkien worked on making realistic artefacts to accompany his writing; he spent enormous effort on a facsimile Book of Mazarbul to resemble the burnt, torn volume abandoned at the tomb of the Dwarf-leader Balin in the subterranean realm of Moria; in the story, the wizard Gandalf finds the book and struggles to read out a substantial amount of the damaged text.[1][T 4] Tolkien carefully stained the artefact's materials, actually burning in the burn-marks and tearing the paper to make it as authentic as possible.[1] He anxiously wrote to his publisher Rayner Unwin asking about the reproduction of the artefact.[T 5] The company however chose not to include an image of the book in the first edition, prompting Tolkien to remark that without it the text at the start of "The Bridge of Khazad-Dûm" was "rather absurd".[T 3] Tolkien realized late in his life that he had made a mistake in the artefact: the text was written in runes, as if somehow the Book of Mazarbul had surprisingly survived thousands of years from the Third Age, but the text itself was English, not the Common Speech that the book's scribe would have used.[4]

The Doors of Durin edit

The Lord of the Rings, despite Tolkien's best efforts, appeared with only one illustration other than its maps and calligraphy. This was The Doors of Durin, in the first volume, The Fellowship of the Ring, in 1954.[1][T 6]

The Doors of Durin were the magical stone gates forming the western entrance to Moria; they were invisible when shut, but could be made visible by moonlight, whereupon their lettering and design, worked in mithril, could be seen. That lettering in fact contained a welcome and the password, to those who could read the Feänorian script (Tengwar) and understand the Elvish language (Sindarin). Tolkien gave the design elegantly curled trees, mirroring the curls of the script.[1] The design's clean lines cost Tolkien much effort; he made numerous sketches, each one a simplification of the last, to attain the apparent simplicity of the final design.[1][5]

 
A Numenorean tile, such as might have been saved from the wreck of Númenor by Elendil, and taken in his ships to Middle-earth.[T 7]

He wrote to Unwin that while he was drawing it in black ink "it should of course properly appear in white line on a black background, since it represents a silver line in the darkness. How does that appeal to the Production Department?"[T 1]

The image was accompanied by a calligraphic caption in English, made to resemble "both the insular characters of Old English manuscript and the very Feänorian characters [that] it translates".[1]

The Silmarillion edit

Tolkien did not live to see The Silmarillion published, but he prepared images for it, including paintings of several symmetrical tile-like heraldic emblems for its kings and houses, and an actual Númenórean tile such as would have been rescued from the wreck of the civilisation of Númenor in Elendil's ships, and brought to Middle-earth.[T 7] One of his emblems, for Lúthien Tinúviel, was used on the front cover of The Silmarillion, and another five (for Fingolfin, Eärendil, Idril Celebrindal, Elwë, and Fëanor) were used on the back cover.[T 8]

Maps edit

 
Fantasy, cartography, calligraphy: Detail from Tolkien's map of Wilderland in The Hobbit, supposedly a fair copy made by the Hobbit Bilbo Baggins, an illusion reinforced by Tolkien's own "charming hand lettering".[6]

Tolkien's maps, like his illustrations, helped his readers to enter his subcreated world of Middle-earth. The Hobbit had two maps; The Lord of the Rings had three, redrawn by his son Christopher Tolkien; The Silmarillion had two. These served multiple purposes, first as guides to the author, helping to ensure consistency in the narrative, and later to the reader through the often complex routes taken by his characters.[1][6]

Calligraphy edit

Tolkien's profession of philology made him familiar with medieval illuminated manuscripts; he imitated their style in his own calligraphy, an art which his mother had taught him. He applied this skill in his development of Middle-earth, creating alphabets such as Tengwar for his invented languages, especially Elvish.[1]

Tolkien applied his skill in calligraphy to write the One Ring's iconic inscription, in the Black Speech of Mordor, using Tengwar. The calligraphic inscription and a translation provided by Gandalf appear in The Fellowship of the Ring.[T 9]

 
Multiple dimensions of artistry: Tolkien used his skill in calligraphy to write the One Ring's iconic inscription, in the Black Speech of Mordor, using the Elvish Tengwar script, both of which he invented.[1][T 9]

Publication edit

In 1979, Tolkien's son Christopher began the process of bringing his father's artwork to the world's attention, beyond the images already published at that time on calendars, by editing Pictures by J.R.R. Tolkien.[T 10] It had 48 plates, some in colour.[7]

Two major books have addressed Tolkien's artwork: Hammond and Scull's 1995 collection of his paintings, J. R. R. Tolkien: Artist & Illustrator;[8] and Catherine McIlwaine's 2018 book accompanying the exhibition she curated at the Bodleian Library, Tolkien: Maker of Middle-earth.[9] Hammond and Scull have also published two further collections; The Art of The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien (2011)[10] and The Art of The Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien (2015).[11]

Analysis edit

Influences on Tolkien's artwork identified by scholars include Japonisme, Art Nouveau, Viking design, and William Morris. Japonisme is seen in stylised features like Tolkien's mountains, waves, and dragons. The influence of Morris's book Some Hints on Pattern Designing, which Tolkien owned, appears in his designs for tiles and heraldic devices for The Silmarillion.[12]

John R. Holmes, in the J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia, states that given the struggle faced by literary critics to establish Tolkien's position as a writer, in the face of an enduringly hostile literary establishment, "the problem of evaluating Tolkien's status as a visual artist is even more daunting".[1] The Tolkien scholar Patchen Mortimer similarly comments on the "contentious debate" about him, noting that his many readers find his books and "the attendant languages, histories, maps, artwork, and apocrypha"[13] a huge accomplishment, while his critics "dismiss his work as childish, irrelevant, and worse".[13] Mortimer observes that admirers and critics treat his work as "escapist and romantic",[13] nothing to do with the 20th century. Mortimer calls this "an appalling oversight", writing that "Tolkien's project was as grand and avant-garde as those of Wagner or the Futurists, and his works are as suffused with the spirit of the age as any by Eliot, Joyce, or Hemingway".[13]

The Tolkien scholars Jeffrey J. MacLeod and Anna Smol write that as an artist, Tolkien "straddled the amateur and professional fields", something he did also in his fiction and his scholarly studies. They note that he always had pencils, paper, coloured inks, chalks, and paintboxes to hand, and that his metaphors of creativity, as in his essay On Fairy-Stories, constantly refer to colour, or as in his poem Mythopoeia, to the theme of light,[14] something that the scholar of mythology and medieval literature Verlyn Flieger calls central to the whole mythology, seen throughout The Silmarillion.[15] MacLeod and Smol write that images and text "merge" in his creative work in four ways: in drafting his tales; in shaping his descriptions of landscapes; in his explorations of the visual appearance of text, as in his invented alphabets, his calligraphy, and his "JRRT" monogram; and in his view of the relationship between illustration and fantasy. In short, they conclude, "Tolkien's art and his visual imagination should be considered an essential part of his writing and thinking."[12]

Artists inspired by Tolkien's writing edit

Many artists and illustrators have created drawings, paintings, and book illustrations of Tolkien's Middle-earth. Tolkien was critical of some of the early attempts,[T 11] but was happy to collaborate with the illustrator Pauline Baynes who prepared the iconic map of Middle-earth.[16] Among the many artists who have worked on Middle-earth projects are John Howe, Alan Lee, and Ted Nasmith; as well as illustrating books, Howe and Lee worked as conceptual artists for Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings film trilogy.[17]

References edit

Primary edit

  1. ^ a b Carpenter 2023, #137 to Rayner Unwin, 11 April 1953
  2. ^ a b Tolkien 1979, Figure 1
  3. ^ a b Carpenter 2023, #141 to Allen & Unwin, 9 October 1953
  4. ^ Tolkien 1954a, book 2, ch. 5 "The Bridge of Khazad-Dûm"
  5. ^ Carpenter 2023, #139 to Rayner Unwin, 8 August 1953
  6. ^ Tolkien 1954a, book 2, ch. 4 "A Journey in the Dark"
  7. ^ a b Tolkien 1979, Figure 46
  8. ^ Tolkien 1977, Front and back cover
  9. ^ a b Tolkien 1954a, book 1, ch. 2 "The Shadow of the Past"
  10. ^ Tolkien 1979, Foreword
  11. ^ Carpenter 2023, #107 to Sir Stanley Unwin, 7 December 1946.

Secondary edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Holmes 2013, pp. 27–32.
  2. ^ a b c McIlwaine 2018, pp. 70–71.
  3. ^ "The Hill: Hobbiton-across-the Water". Museoteca. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
  4. ^ Fimi 2010, pp. 192–194.
  5. ^ Huttar 1975, pp. 121–122.
  6. ^ a b Campbell 2013, pp. 405–408.
  7. ^ Pictures / by J.R.R. Tolkien; foreword and notes by Christopher Tolkien. WorldCat. OCLC 937613591. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
  8. ^ Hammond & Scull 1995.
  9. ^ McIlwaine 2018.
  10. ^ Hammond & Scull 2011.
  11. ^ Hammond & Scull 2015.
  12. ^ a b MacLeod & Smol 2017, pp. 115–131.
  13. ^ a b c d Mortimer 2005, pp. 113–129.
  14. ^ MacLeod & Smol 2008, article 10.
  15. ^ Flieger 1983, pp. 6–61, 89–90 and passim.
  16. ^ McIlwaine 2018, p. 384.
  17. ^ . Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on 19 February 2006. Retrieved 29 May 2006.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Tolkien's paintings, illustrations, maps, and calligraphy on the Tolkien Estate website

tolkien, artwork, element, creativity, from, time, when, began, write, fiction, professional, philologist, tolkien, prepared, wide, variety, materials, support, fiction, including, illustrations, middle, earth, fantasy, books, facsimile, artefacts, more, less,. J R R Tolkien s artwork was a key element of his creativity from the time when he began to write fiction A professional philologist J R R Tolkien prepared a wide variety of materials to support his fiction including illustrations for his Middle earth fantasy books facsimile artefacts more or less picturesque maps calligraphy and sketches and paintings from life Some of his artworks combined several of these elements Tolkien s illustration of the Doors of Durin for The Fellowship of the Ring with Sindarin inscription in Tengwar script both being his inventions Despite his best efforts this was the only drawing other than maps and calligraphy in the first edition of The Lord of the Rings 1 In early editions it was printed in black on white rather than as here and as Tolkien wished in white on black T 1 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 Posthumously collections of his artworks have been published and academics have begun to evaluate him as an artist as well as an author Contents 1 Early work sketches 2 Illustrations for his books 2 1 The Hobbit 2 2 The Lord of the Rings 2 2 1 The Book of Mazarbul 2 2 2 The Doors of Durin 2 3 The Silmarillion 2 4 Maps 2 5 Calligraphy 3 Publication 4 Analysis 5 Artists inspired by Tolkien s writing 6 References 6 1 Primary 6 2 Secondary 6 3 Sources 7 External linksEarly work sketches edit nbsp Ink drawing of Quallington Carpenter Eastbury Berkshire 1912 2 Early in his life Tolkien taught by his mother made many sketches and paintings from life He drew with skill and depicted landscapes buildings trees and flowers realistically The one thing he admitted he could not draw was the human figure where his attempts have been described as cartoonish as if a different hand was involved 1 2 The scholars Wayne G Hammond and Christina Scull describe his 1912 ink drawing of a cottage in Berkshire Quallington Carpenter as the most impressive of these early works its sagging walls and thatched roof elaborately textured and shaded 2 Illustrations for his books editTolkien s illustrations for his books consisted of drawings paintings artefacts more or less picturesque maps and calligraphy 1 The Hobbit edit nbsp Watercolour painting The Hill Hobbiton across the Water used as the frontispiece of the first American edition of The Hobbit 1938 1 T 2 Further information Bag End Tolkien s illustrations contributed to the effectiveness of his writings though much of his oeuvre remained unpublished in his lifetime However the first British edition of The Hobbit in 1937 was published with ten of his black and white drawings 1 In addition it had as its frontispiece Tolkien s drawing The Hill Hobbiton across the Water It depicts Bilbo Baggins s home village of Hobbiton in the Shire The old mill based on the mill at Sarehole and The Water are in the foreground an idealised English countryside in the middle distance and The Hill and Bilbo s home Bag End tunnelled into The Hill in the background 3 The American edition replaced the frontispiece with Tolkien s full colour watercolour painting of the same scene this was then used in later impressions in England also T 2 The American edition had in addition four of his watercolour paintings 1 The Lord of the Rings edit The Book of Mazarbul edit nbsp The first page from The Book of Mazarbul in the form of a facsimile artefact created by Tolkien to support the story and bring readers into his fantasy The publishers declined to include a reproduction of the artefact in the first edition of The Lord of the Rings 1 T 3 Further information Cirth Angerthas Erebor Tolkien worked on making realistic artefacts to accompany his writing he spent enormous effort on a facsimile Book of Mazarbul to resemble the burnt torn volume abandoned at the tomb of the Dwarf leader Balin in the subterranean realm of Moria in the story the wizard Gandalf finds the book and struggles to read out a substantial amount of the damaged text 1 T 4 Tolkien carefully stained the artefact s materials actually burning in the burn marks and tearing the paper to make it as authentic as possible 1 He anxiously wrote to his publisher Rayner Unwin asking about the reproduction of the artefact T 5 The company however chose not to include an image of the book in the first edition prompting Tolkien to remark that without it the text at the start of The Bridge of Khazad Dum was rather absurd T 3 Tolkien realized late in his life that he had made a mistake in the artefact the text was written in runes as if somehow the Book of Mazarbul had surprisingly survived thousands of years from the Third Age but the text itself was English not the Common Speech that the book s scribe would have used 4 The Doors of Durin edit The Lord of the Rings despite Tolkien s best efforts appeared with only one illustration other than its maps and calligraphy This was The Doors of Durin in the first volume The Fellowship of the Ring in 1954 1 T 6 The Doors of Durin were the magical stone gates forming the western entrance to Moria they were invisible when shut but could be made visible by moonlight whereupon their lettering and design worked in mithril could be seen That lettering in fact contained a welcome and the password to those who could read the Feanorian script Tengwar and understand the Elvish language Sindarin Tolkien gave the design elegantly curled trees mirroring the curls of the script 1 The design s clean lines cost Tolkien much effort he made numerous sketches each one a simplification of the last to attain the apparent simplicity of the final design 1 5 nbsp A Numenorean tile such as might have been saved from the wreck of Numenor by Elendil and taken in his ships to Middle earth T 7 He wrote to Unwin that while he was drawing it in black ink it should of course properly appear in white line on a black background since it represents a silver line in the darkness How does that appeal to the Production Department T 1 The image was accompanied by a calligraphic caption in English made to resemble both the insular characters of Old English manuscript and the very Feanorian characters that it translates 1 The Silmarillion edit Tolkien did not live to see The Silmarillion published but he prepared images for it including paintings of several symmetrical tile like heraldic emblems for its kings and houses and an actual Numenorean tile such as would have been rescued from the wreck of the civilisation of Numenor in Elendil s ships and brought to Middle earth T 7 One of his emblems for Luthien Tinuviel was used on the front cover of The Silmarillion and another five for Fingolfin Earendil Idril Celebrindal Elwe and Feanor were used on the back cover T 8 Maps edit nbsp Fantasy cartography calligraphy Detail from Tolkien s map of Wilderland in The Hobbit supposedly a fair copy made by the Hobbit Bilbo Baggins an illusion reinforced by Tolkien s own charming hand lettering 6 Main article Tolkien s maps Tolkien s maps like his illustrations helped his readers to enter his subcreated world of Middle earth The Hobbit had two maps The Lord of the Rings had three redrawn by his son Christopher Tolkien The Silmarillion had two These served multiple purposes first as guides to the author helping to ensure consistency in the narrative and later to the reader through the often complex routes taken by his characters 1 6 Calligraphy edit Tolkien s profession of philology made him familiar with medieval illuminated manuscripts he imitated their style in his own calligraphy an art which his mother had taught him He applied this skill in his development of Middle earth creating alphabets such as Tengwar for his invented languages especially Elvish 1 Tolkien applied his skill in calligraphy to write the One Ring s iconic inscription in the Black Speech of Mordor using Tengwar The calligraphic inscription and a translation provided by Gandalf appear in The Fellowship of the Ring T 9 nbsp Multiple dimensions of artistry Tolkien used his skill in calligraphy to write the One Ring s iconic inscription in the Black Speech of Mordor using the Elvish Tengwar script both of which he invented 1 T 9 Publication editIn 1979 Tolkien s son Christopher began the process of bringing his father s artwork to the world s attention beyond the images already published at that time on calendars by editing Pictures by J R R Tolkien T 10 It had 48 plates some in colour 7 Two major books have addressed Tolkien s artwork Hammond and Scull s 1995 collection of his paintings J R R Tolkien Artist amp Illustrator 8 and Catherine McIlwaine s 2018 book accompanying the exhibition she curated at the Bodleian Library Tolkien Maker of Middle earth 9 Hammond and Scull have also published two further collections The Art of The Hobbit by J R R Tolkien 2011 10 and The Art of The Lord of the Rings by J R R Tolkien 2015 11 Analysis editInfluences on Tolkien s artwork identified by scholars include Japonisme Art Nouveau Viking design and William Morris Japonisme is seen in stylised features like Tolkien s mountains waves and dragons The influence of Morris s book Some Hints on Pattern Designing which Tolkien owned appears in his designs for tiles and heraldic devices for The Silmarillion 12 John R Holmes in the J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia states that given the struggle faced by literary critics to establish Tolkien s position as a writer in the face of an enduringly hostile literary establishment the problem of evaluating Tolkien s status as a visual artist is even more daunting 1 The Tolkien scholar Patchen Mortimer similarly comments on the contentious debate about him noting that his many readers find his books and the attendant languages histories maps artwork and apocrypha 13 a huge accomplishment while his critics dismiss his work as childish irrelevant and worse 13 Mortimer observes that admirers and critics treat his work as escapist and romantic 13 nothing to do with the 20th century Mortimer calls this an appalling oversight writing that Tolkien s project was as grand and avant garde as those of Wagner or the Futurists and his works are as suffused with the spirit of the age as any by Eliot Joyce or Hemingway 13 The Tolkien scholars Jeffrey J MacLeod and Anna Smol write that as an artist Tolkien straddled the amateur and professional fields something he did also in his fiction and his scholarly studies They note that he always had pencils paper coloured inks chalks and paintboxes to hand and that his metaphors of creativity as in his essay On Fairy Stories constantly refer to colour or as in his poem Mythopoeia to the theme of light 14 something that the scholar of mythology and medieval literature Verlyn Flieger calls central to the whole mythology seen throughout The Silmarillion 15 MacLeod and Smol write that images and text merge in his creative work in four ways in drafting his tales in shaping his descriptions of landscapes in his explorations of the visual appearance of text as in his invented alphabets his calligraphy and his JRRT monogram and in his view of the relationship between illustration and fantasy In short they conclude Tolkien s art and his visual imagination should be considered an essential part of his writing and thinking 12 Artists inspired by Tolkien s writing editMain article Illustrating Tolkien Many artists and illustrators have created drawings paintings and book illustrations of Tolkien s Middle earth Tolkien was critical of some of the early attempts T 11 but was happy to collaborate with the illustrator Pauline Baynes who prepared the iconic map of Middle earth 16 Among the many artists who have worked on Middle earth projects are John Howe Alan Lee and Ted Nasmith as well as illustrating books Howe and Lee worked as conceptual artists for Peter Jackson s The Lord of the Rings film trilogy 17 References editPrimary edit a b Carpenter 2023 137 to Rayner Unwin 11 April 1953 a b Tolkien 1979 Figure 1 a b Carpenter 2023 141 to Allen amp Unwin 9 October 1953 Tolkien 1954a book 2 ch 5 The Bridge of Khazad Dum Carpenter 2023 139 to Rayner Unwin 8 August 1953 Tolkien 1954a book 2 ch 4 A Journey in the Dark a b Tolkien 1979 Figure 46 Tolkien 1977 Front and back cover a b Tolkien 1954a book 1 ch 2 The Shadow of the Past Tolkien 1979 Foreword Carpenter 2023 107 to Sir Stanley Unwin 7 December 1946 Secondary edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Holmes 2013 pp 27 32 a b c McIlwaine 2018 pp 70 71 The Hill Hobbiton across the Water Museoteca Retrieved 16 July 2020 Fimi 2010 pp 192 194 Huttar 1975 pp 121 122 a b Campbell 2013 pp 405 408 Pictures by J R R Tolkien foreword and notes by Christopher Tolkien WorldCat OCLC 937613591 Retrieved 16 July 2020 Hammond amp Scull 1995 McIlwaine 2018 Hammond amp Scull 2011 Hammond amp Scull 2015 a b MacLeod amp Smol 2017 pp 115 131 a b c d Mortimer 2005 pp 113 129 MacLeod amp Smol 2008 article 10 Flieger 1983 pp 6 61 89 90 and passim McIlwaine 2018 p 384 76th Academy Awards Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on 19 February 2006 Retrieved 29 May 2006 Sources edit Campbell Alice 2013 2007 Maps In Drout Michael D C ed J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia Routledge pp 405 408 ISBN 978 0 415 86511 1 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 Fimi Dimitra 2010 2008 Tolkien Race and Cultural History From Fairies to Hobbits Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 21951 9 OCLC 222251097 Flieger Verlyn 1983 Splintered Light Logos and Language in Tolkien s World Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 1955 0 Hammond Wayne G Scull Christina eds 1995 J R R Tolkien Artist amp Illustrator HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 261 10322 1 Hammond Wayne G Scull Christina 2011 The Art of The Hobbit by J R R Tolkien London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 744081 8 Hammond Wayne G Scull Christina 2015 The Art of The Lord of the Rings by J R R Tolkien London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 810575 4 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 Huttar Charles A 1975 Hell and the City Tolkien and the Traditions of Western Literature In Lobdell Jared ed A Tolkien Compass Open Court pp 121 122 ISBN 978 0875483030 McIlwaine Catherine 2018 Tolkien Maker of Middle earth Bodleian Library ISBN 978 1 851 24485 0 MacLeod Jeffrey J Smol Anna 2008 A Single Leaf Tolkien s Visual Art and Fantasy Mythlore 27 1 article 10 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 Mortimer Patchen 2005 Tolkien and Modernism Tolkien Studies 2 1 113 129 doi 10 1353 tks 2005 0025 S2CID 170640541 Tolkien J R R 1979 Tolkien Christopher ed Pictures by J R R Tolkien Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 741003 1 OCLC 5978089 Tolkien J R R 1954a The Fellowship of the Ring The Lord of the Rings Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 9552942 Tolkien J R R 1977 Christopher Tolkien ed The Silmarillion Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 25730 2 External links editTolkien s paintings illustrations maps and calligraphy on the Tolkien Estate website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J R R Tolkien 27s artwork amp oldid 1221247210 The Book of Mazarbul, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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