Friday, July 26, 2013

Pssssst...

I know it's been quiet here lately.

But I now have a new website!

arminnelsyn.com

It has info and new artwork regarding my book project, as well as a portfolio of older work. From here on out I will be doing my blogging there. I'll keep this blog online for old time's sake, but I won't be updating here anymore. So long, blogspot! Thanks for reading along!

Friday, May 3, 2013

Museum Finds

Spent the last week in Chicago leading students through the sites and museums. After being promptly ditched by my students at the Field Museum, I struck out on my own. Here are a few discoveries I made...

Engraved Globe. See if you can spot the severed head!

Pocket Sundial Cube



Cannon Sundial. The sun's rays fire a mini cannon at the right hour!

Decorative Telescopes

Creepy Dolls

Yelling Deer

"Far Side" Mask

Crocodile Warrior Gear

...including dehydrated crocodile sword sheath

Prehistoric Oversized Mammals

...including jurassic jumbo deer

And this little guy.






Wednesday, March 27, 2013

I is for Imp


As used in English vocab, an imp is a mischievous, troublemaking child. It refers to the mythical creature from fairy stories. An imp is a small fairy or gremlin-like character who spends a lot of time pulling jokes and hanging out in the underworld. Unlike other meddling underworld creatures, imps have a certain innocence about them. This little blurb from Wikipedia reminds me of some of my past students - don't tell them!
"Imps were often portrayed as lonely little creatures always in search of human attention. They often used jokes and pranks as a means of attracting human friendship, which often backfired when people became tired or annoyed of the imp's endeavors, usually driving it away."
So don't mind the imp's misbehavior. It's just a screen for needing attention. Not that they'd do anything seriously troubling...
"Most of the time, the pranks were harmless fun, but some could be upsetting and harmful, such as switching babies."
Oh. 

Monday, March 25, 2013

The Fox and the Crow


Took a break from my current project to paint something besides monsters doing alphabet yoga.

The painting's based on one of Aesop's fables. In the story, the fox flatters a vain crow into singing for him. The crow opens his beak to sing, thus dropping a piece of cheese which the fox quickly steals away.

My favorite version comes from the band mewithoutYou, which is based on Bawa Muhaiyaddeen's interpretation of the fable in My Love You My Children. It culminates in a very different moral played out in bizarre lyrical brilliance:

We'll rest upon the Knee
Where all divisions cease to be
And rootbeer float in our banana boat
Across the tapioca sea

When letting all attachments go
Is the only prayer we know
May it be so
May it be so
May it be so





Friday, March 8, 2013

The Ettin


E is for Ettin, a two-headed giant. He's a lazy one, and doesn't get moving much. I applied some watercolor "blooms" to his skin to look as if large patches of lichen had grown over time.

The Ettin is an etymological evolution of the Jøtunn, or Frost-Giants, of old Norse mythology. In Old English, Jøtunn became Eoten which in turn became Ettin.

This guy (or guys?) isn't specifically named in many monster tales. However, they are present in C.S. Lewis' Narnia. The majority of The Silver Chair takes place in a region north of Narnia called Ettinsmoore, which happens to be the cold, mountainous home of the giants.





Sunday, February 17, 2013

The Cockatrice


The cockatrice is half rooster, half dragon. It's produced from a rooster's egg (yes, a rooster not a chicken!) that has been nurtured by a toad. The cockatrice is essentially a variation of the Basilisk myth with similar qualities. It's gaze kills or turns things to stone, weasels are the only living things that can survive its staring contests, etc.

Where do creatures like this come from? Many monsters originated from medieval bestiaries. These books were something between natural history encyclopedias and Sunday School lessons. Each animal was a sort of Christian spiritual symbol. Where there were gaps in biblical or biological knowledge, natural creatures were embellished to illustrate the various moral principles. Often, creatures were simply made up, derived from mistranslation or superstition. In fact, the cockatrice cameoed multiple times in the original King James Bible as a rendering for the Hebrew word for cobra or viper. 

And that's where we get something as bizarre as the chicken-snake.

Early Sketch


Monday, January 14, 2013

D for Dragon

The project continues...


Here's an early sketch for layout and values:


My original color scheme was on the warm side of the color wheel, but I kept getting frustrated with it during painting. Everything was sickly yellow-green, brown and red. Eventually I switched my entire color scheme to cooler blues and purples.

I'm happy with how it turned out. My personal nitpick, however, lies with the fire. It's too static. Reminds me of Dale Chihuly's glasswork instead of flickering flame. More to learn next time!