Thursday, April 29, 2010

Fight On 1

Inked.  Still looks like shit.  Added some pencil shading just to try to salvage somewhat.





Put in a ink wash.  Looks like crap now.



Sketch for final.  Trying to make it look like his inking is bringing the map to life, difficult idea.




Roughs for Fight On! illo.  Description is: "• a picture of someone drawing a map of a fantasy world"

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Orks - 4 - Weight distribution

Playing around with masses and distributing the weight in different parts of the body. 

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Orks - 2- D&D to WOW

Orks have been portrayed a number of ways in RPGs and other games since the first days of D&D.  The pictures collected below show some interesting similarities and differences.  Some of the things that seem to run throughout all of the pictures are pig-like snouts, large pointy ears and green or brownish-green skin.  Sometimes they seem to be ordered, sometimes disorganized.  Savage versus more tribe-like.  They seem to like axes, and if armored it has a hastily put together from scraps feel.


Friday, April 16, 2010

Orks - 1 - History

Orks have been around for a while and have been rendered in many different ways.  As the start of the project, I want to go back and publicly research the history of Orks from a literal and artistic perspective.  Let's challenge what we know about these fantasy creatures.
Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orc) (the supreme source of all knowledge...and yes, since this is a fantasy creature, I can surely use it as a reputable source to quote) defines orks as:  "various races of tough and warlike humanoid creatures in various fantasy settings."  That's pretty generic.  They credit Tolkein with the first modern usage of the word "Orc".  There are a bunch of older references to Orc in the article and you can peruse those on your own time.  Pulling out interesting things:
- Origins of the word are "demon", "hell" (orcus), "corpse" (orcné), and "giant", "ogre", "hell-devil" 
- Description from 1632 fairytales of "orco":  "large, speaking, mannish beast (hairy and tusked) that lived away in a dark forest or garden, and that might be evil (capturing/eating humans), indifferent or even benevolent"
- 1656: "Orke, begotten by an Incubus"
- "Tyrolean ork which may be either a house gnome or a mountain spirit that acts as protector of wildlife"
- "In Tolkien's writings, Orcs are of human shape, of varying size but always smaller than Men, ugly, filthy, with a taste for human flesh. They are fanged, bow-legged and long-armed, and some have dark skin as if burned. In a private letter, Tolkien describes them as "squat, broad, flat-nosed, sallow-skinned, with wide mouths and slant eyes ... degraded and repulsive versions of the (to Europeans) least lovely Mongol-types".[11] They are portrayed as miserable, crafty and vicious beings."
So, there's some interesting stuff right there.  I'm especially honing in on the last description quoted about them being derivative of Mongols.

So, things I want to consider in future posts:
- Orks in D&D, both from description and from Art
- Orks in Warhammer and how they differ
- Realistic versus fantastical views on orcs
- Comparing orcs to animals and other groups
- Orc costume, armor, etc
- Orc habitats

100 Posts on Orks

So, I have a new idea.  It's inspired by this post: http://agent44.com/blog2/?p=838, but more specifically around the "pottery parable" linked within that post.  I'm going to do 100 blog posts about Orks.  These will be history, research, doodles, sketches, digital art just about Orks.  What the goal of this project is to push past my normal preconcieved notion of what an Ork should look like and maybe get some good deviations from the norm.  I also hope to improve artistically by trying different artistic techniques, both from a tools and approach perspective.  Maybe this will be 100 boring posts with a bunch of doodles, but hopefully we get something interesting.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010