Seasons Greetings!

0 Comments | This entry was posted on Dec 19 2009

Well I said I was working on a Christmas piece, though I suppose this might come as a surprise to those who weren’t expect it.

The wonderful thing about Christmas is that, despite what the fundamentalist nutjobs and the Republican party want you to think, it’s truly a multicultural holiday. In fact, almost nothing we associate with Christmas today has anything to do with Christianity, except for the name. The winter solstice has, of course, been important since the first civilizations arose, but our Christmas season of greenery, lights, and feasting, and the concept of “eat drink and be merry,” come from a Roman winter festival Saturnalia. The idea of a god-son born in midwinter comes from the later Roman holiday Dies Natalis Solis Invitci, the birthday of the unconquered son. Sun worship in the form of the infant-god-incarnate motif was very popular in the later empire, and many of the customs of Christmas come from the celebration of Mithras’ birthday. Other traditions, like gift-giving, christmas trees and wreaths, and traditional foods come from Northern European pagan religions (even our word “Yule” was the name of the Germanic winter solstice festival). We always hear that Jesus was born in the spring, during the Roman census, but the early Catholic church wanted to eliminate these pagan traditions, and so set up Christmas on the 25th as a way to subvert these native customs. However, even with the loss of their original meanings, the traditions carried as Christmas was popularized in Victorian England, and then later in the US. Even Santa Claus has a very diverse origin. He is a blend of Father Christmas, an English character whose origin and outfit go all the way back to Roman Saturn, and Sinterklaas, a Dutch character who evolved out of the much earlier story of Saint Nicholas. These two folk figures were merged together in the US in the 19th century, and the character Santa Claus was born. Later the Coca Cola image of Santa Claus, combined with the short stories of Washing Irving and Clement Clarke Moore cemented the American commercialized concept of Santa Claus in our hearts and minds. The Christmas Card was started in 1875, and the rest is history.

And that’s why I say the Republicans and the so-called “traditionalists” can shove it up their turducken when they complain about the commercialization of Christmas and the “War on Christmas” and other bullhonkey like that. Christmas was never a very important or big holiday in the church until the 19th century, when it became commercialized. Its origin has less to do with Jesus than it does with pagan bacchanal, and the true meaning of Christmas is whatever you want it to be, because there is so much tradition wrapped up into it that no one culture can claim ownership of the holiday. (And most of the popular Christmas songs were written by Jews, so they get a piece of the pie, too!)

Anyway enough of my little history lesson. I wanted to show you the painting. Remember the Dutch Sinterklaas who is half of the origin of our Santa Claus? Well he didn’t travel alone. In most of Europe, Saint Nicholas had one or more companions who traveled with him, helping him out. In some cultures, they are based on the original stories of Nicholas of Myra (who, by the way, was from Turkey), like the French Père Fouettard. In some, they are medieval additions to the already mythologized tale, like Knecht Ruprecht, or the Dutch Zwarte Piet. In others, they are remnants of the pagan past — former gods who were either demonized or diminutized when Christianity took over — like the German Belsnickel, the Austrian Klaubauf, Swiss Schmutzli, and others: Rumpelklas, Hans Muff, Bellzebub, Drapp, Bartel, Cert and Andel, Hanstrapp… and the list goes on and on beyond that. This painting is of one of the more well-known Christmas monsters: Krampus.

There’s a decent article in Wikipedia about Krampus, but in short, he’s a scary monster that “birches” the bad kids, while Santa gives them presents (makes you wish for coal instead, doesn’t it?). I find Krampus pretty interesting, because (as you’ll see on the Wikipedia page) he survived the Christianization of the solstice fairly well, and lived on in festivals and even Christmas cards and illustrations. Boy, I would love to get a Krampus card one year…

So here is my Christmas Krampus/Krampus Kard/Merry Krampmass? All I know is if I were raised in the Alps, I would probably not look forward to Christmas nearly as much as I do now.

Krampus

So be good for goodness sake!

NMP Issue 1: The Desire

2 Comments | This entry was posted on Dec 14 2009

Back in the summer and early fall, if you remember, I was doing a lot of work with an RPG company, Nevermet Press. Their first PDF was published this month, and my artwork is on the cover! I also designed a good chunk of the PDF layout as well. Click on the image below to go to the Nevermet Press page for the product.

Nevermet Press Issue 1: The Desire

Nevermet Press Issue 1: The Desire

If you haven’t heard about NMP, it’s a RPG blog that creates community content non-specific to any game system. Kind of drag-and-drop game ideas. The Desire is the product of a number of writers and artists working together, everyone creating their own content based on a central theme — in this case, a villain named The Desire. The cool thing about the project is that, unlike a lot of RPG products that present a linear script with a beginning, middle, and end — severely limiting the GM’s ability to modify the adventure — NMP’s articles develop locations, encounters, items, and characters around a central concept. As a game master, I think it’s a refreshing take on the “modular” concept of game modules, and is easier to plug in to an existing game. Finally, as each writer and artist presents their own vision which stems from the original article, there’s a wider variety of stories to tell. Just like if 10 artists painted the same scene, you’d still get 10 different paintings. (Admittedly, I’m biased because I worked on the project.)

Heroes of the Vale

0 Comments | This entry was posted on Sep 05 2009

Today Nevermet Press was updated with Heroes of the Vale, new game content with some characters related to this month’s content. Here are the three pieces I did for the article, but you should head on over to NMP and look at the article for yourself.

Forgegrider's Apprentice

Forgegrider's Apprentice

The Merchant

The Merchant

The Shepherd

The Shepherd

Items of the Sleepless Drift

0 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 29 2009

New artwork posted today at Nevermet Press: Items of the Sleepless Drift. These are some fantasy magical items related to the site’s current publishing cycle, Neirave. I’m going for the DaVinci-esque traveler’s sketchbook theme for these 3 illustrations.

Items of the Sleepless Drift 1

Items of the Sleepless Drift 2

Items of the Sleepless Drift 3

Dragon

0 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 27 2009

There’s some new content at Nevermet Press with another one of my sketches. This time it’s a dragon. Here’s the picture:

Artwork for "Enemy of my Enemy"

Artwork for "Enemy of my Enemy"

He looks like he’s up to something, right? He’s doing the little finger-twiddling thing. I don’t really know why, but that’s the mood I was in when I sketched him.

Speaking of dragons, I saw an awesome song on TV a while back, on the most famous Japanese kid’s show. I haven’t been able to get it out of my head for days. Here’s the song:

Probably it’s because I want a dragon suit like that…

The Scion of Spring

0 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 21 2009

New fantasy art today: The Scion of Spring. This is the King of Spring with his young apprentice. The full story is on Nevermet Press, but basically this concept is about a forest overrun with cold, and the only way to end the winter is with the help of these two.

The Scion of Spring

The Scion of Spring

New Nevermet Press Art

0 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 16 2009

I’ve been continuing the artwork for Nevermet Press this past week and then some, but I haven’t had a chance to post anything until now. These went live on the website a few days ago, but anyway here they are. (I decided to do color for these this time, though on the site they ended up monochrome. Oh well.)

The first one is called The Bastion of the Hidden Kingdom. It’s basically a haunted manor in the city-state of Corwyn (from my previous post). You can read more of it’s description on its website.

Bastion of the Hidden Kingdom

Bastion of the Hidden Kingdom

Next is a character named Scar, a kind of undead guy with a revenge thing going. Again, it probably makes more sense attached to the story.

Soul's End

Soul's End

I’m working on 3 more pictures for Nevermet Press at the moment, so I’ll be able to post them as soon as I finish. It’s a pretty cool project, and it’s starting to pick up in popularity. Hopefully I’m doing my part well enough.