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Tolkien's Paintings

381 points| mhb | 4 years ago |tolkienestate.com | reply

68 comments

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[+] vlunkr|4 years ago|reply
I think the maps really helped sell the world to me as a kid. There's such a distinct, foreign style to them. Of course every fantasy series now has a map, but the Tolkien maps are still embedded deep in my brain.
[+] SkipperCat|4 years ago|reply
I saw this exhibit at the Morgan Library & Museum several years ago. It was a great experience, not just see the art but explore how deep Tolkien went into building the world of Middle Earth. Truly amazing when someone devotes that much time and effort into their craft.
[+] lelandfe|4 years ago|reply
I’m very jealous, I showed up there a day after the exhibition closed.
[+] danielvaughn|4 years ago|reply
I walked by the Morgan Library on my way to work for years, and never knew they had these cool exhibits until I heard about the Hemingway one right after it closed. Talk about wasted potential...
[+] x3iv130f|4 years ago|reply
Leaf by Niggle is one of my favorite Tolkien short stories.

It is a short 30 minute read about an artist's dedication to his craft.

[+] chrisweekly|4 years ago|reply
Yeah... and amazing as they are, the art and maps are just a fraction of the ~staggeringly~ historically singular overall world-building Tolkien achieved. I mean, two complete languages? I can't even.
[+] legitster|4 years ago|reply
The personal paintings and doodles for his children were so touching. It just reminded me of personal doodles my older brother used to give me. But technology seems to have robbed the boredom and privacy necessary for these types of tiny artistic gestures.
[+] ketzo|4 years ago|reply
Wait -- technology has robbed us of the ability to make doodles for each other?

How? If anything, digital art and memes are both responsible for an explosion of people sending personal, visual creations to each other.

[+] Spivakov|4 years ago|reply
My cousin and I crafted our own fictional adventure on some scratch paper when we were kids. We usually started by drawing a fantasy/sci-fi map, chose a starting point, and then improvised the story as we "travel" in this world purely out of imagination.

Now thinking back this experience is interesting as it sort of reflecting what Tolkien said, "I wisely started with a map, and made the story fit."

[+] jicea|4 years ago|reply
My productivity has abysmally dropped since the release of From Software's Elden Ring. A small thing (among many) that I loved is the "medieval" style of the game map. It's like reading a monk parchemin, or an old book. On an another level, the maps drawn by Tolkien are really superb, evocative and you just want to zoom in and start dreaming in this lands...

[1] https://www.tolkienestate.com/painting/maps/

[+] hbn|4 years ago|reply
From Software has such a neat way of story telling in their games. Cutscenes are far and few between, and the ones that are there really don't tell much story (aside from intro cinematics/game endings, which only give a high-level rundown of the world)

Instead, information is drip-fed to you through NPC dialogues, item/spell descriptions, and level design. Meaning you'll probably pick up very little of the actual story as you play the games, and it's something of a community effort to put the pieces together and figure out what's going on. And even with all that, there's still tons of gaps that can only be theorized about. It really makes the games feel like they take place in a huge world with tons of history that's much greater than you, the player character. The world doesn't seem to care about you at all, you're just an observer of a much greater story.

The creator of the games, Hidetaka Miyazaki has credited this vague style of storytelling to him reading fantasy novels as a kid, without a good understanding of English. There would be parts of the story he didn't really understand, so he'd just fill in the gaps with his own theories.

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/mar/31/bloodborn...

[+] fmajid|4 years ago|reply
It's worth recognizing the late Christopher Tolkien for his life's work protecting, preserving and collecting his father's writings, in a deeply moving example of filial piety.
[+] subsubzero|4 years ago|reply
I couldn't agree more with that statement. For someone who had read the hobbit, LOTR, and the Silmarillion and wanted more from that universe. Christopher Tolkien provided a wealth of new books from his fathers unpublished papers released since the 90's and beyond: things like unfinished tales, the children of Hurin, the fall of Gondolin, etc. I couldn't be happier having these extra novels to read and am thankful for the tireless work of his son to bring these to light who worked into his 90's to get them published.
[+] wheybags|4 years ago|reply
Seriously. Especially When you compare to some other inheritors (eg Brian Herbert)
[+] flir|4 years ago|reply
Alternative view: he made a career out of gleaning his father's wastepaper bin, and jealously made sure other people couldn't play in his sandpit.

(Obviously I've never been a fan).

[+] antattack|4 years ago|reply
You make it sound like they are doing it for free.
[+] vmilner|4 years ago|reply
I'm pleased Tolkien's image of the Book of Mazarbul is there, I'm currently reading Humphrey Carpenter's biography and there's a mention of the fact that Tolkien painstakingly created the look of the final page, but it was wasted as Unwin couldn't afford to print it in the original edition of LOTR.
[+] WHA8m|4 years ago|reply
I was a bit involved in graffiti stuff in the past, so I went straight to the 'calligraphy' page. I must say, the heading of the second script 'Errantry' could come straight from a subway. Very sick old school style, mister Tolkien!

On a serious note: big fan. This guy and his work amazes me!

[+] TedDoesntTalk|4 years ago|reply
It is wonderful these maps and artwork is so freely available. When I first read Tolkien many years ago (long before the Jackson films), you could not get this kind of information, art, and maps. Only whatever happened to be in print, which in hindsight was remarkably little.
[+] aresant|4 years ago|reply
These are so vibrant, is there anywhere these are collected in a book?
[+] belfalas|4 years ago|reply
Wonderful stuff! To anyone who enjoyed The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, please please please do yourself a favor and read The Smith of Wooton Major as well. It is one of those books that gets overlooked but it's a wonderful read. The experience of reading the book changes with time.
[+] nanidin|4 years ago|reply
I wanted to open one of the links on the site in a new tab. I right clicked, and nothing. They block right click! Why! To protect their precious?
[+] jkingsbery|4 years ago|reply
You cannot pass... to the next page by right clicking.
[+] onorton|4 years ago|reply
You can use the middle mouse button to open in new tabs. Looks like that's not disabled.
[+] moultano|4 years ago|reply
I would love to have an nice hardback of the books that put as many of Tolkien's drawings in them as we have. I have copies that Alan Lee illustrated, and they're beautiful, but the subtlety and the vagueness of these just captures better how I felt about the books when I first read them.
[+] jusonchan81|4 years ago|reply
I first learned of Tolkien on South Park when they renamed the character Token to Tolkien.
[+] RandallBrown|4 years ago|reply
It's been Tolkien the whole time. Why would you think it's Token?
[+] make3|4 years ago|reply
scrolljacking is terrible. I wish there was an easy way to disable it
[+] webspaceadam|4 years ago|reply
tolkiens approach to creativity is truly inspiring.
[+] bitsoda|4 years ago|reply
I had no idea he was so prolific outside of writing. It makes me wonder how much I would create if my only media access was radio and lived in a world with far fewer distractions. Then again, everything's relative and there exist many creators today whose genius doesn't seem to be diminished by all our screens.

Curse you, internet addiction!

[+] jacob-s-son|4 years ago|reply
As Lion Feuchtwanger put it: "Talented person is talented everywhere."