As Eric noted in that Awesome Lies blog interview, Rick's own words:yeah, that photo is of the Xerox one, not the Rank Xerox one. that was one hell of a pricey machine at the time. Who knew they had THAT kinda money. sure, it was a 1979/1980 machine but.. Optional Harddrives up to 10MB! at that stage! dual Floppy drives...
@dieselmonkey , 1984 before your time?
Yes it is, you are quite right. You are on about John Blanche, yes? We follow a hobby which is heavily nostalgic, and here are all adherents to the cult of Oldhammer, all ages & backgrounds worshipping at same alter.Art is subjective and if people like some art and not others
I suppose I'd wonder which part of his work you mean; there's a definite mark of his hand throughout his whole career, but at the same time his early work is much more closely connected with the fairytale art of, say, Aubrey Beardsley than the later 'grimdark' gothic work was. I'm not into grimdark, but his early stuff is beautiful. I'm lucky enough to have the catalogue of the Ansell's "Harry the Hammer and Friends" exhibition, as well as a copy of Ratspike, so I suppose that does give me a bit of a retrospective on his style.Am I alone in not being that struck with his work?
Art is subjective and if people like some art and not others that is of course totes fine, but I can't be the only one who is not that keen on his art?
Not saying it is bad or he was a bell, just curious?
I've just been looking at the illustrations he did for the Sorcery Spell Book. Great fun.I think my first conscious encounter of his work was the Sorcery books, the linework felt some much more detailed and stylised than the others I had read in the FF range and those big adventures were formative for my fantasy imagination.
Can you articulate what do don’t like about his artwork?
Is there an early GW artist that you prefer over Blanche?
Is there a certain period or style of his artwork that you prefer over others or just the whole oeuvre?
I can second that - I remember thinking "what the heck" at the time, having been used to all the art styles that came before they seemed really rough and ready and I wasn't a fan. Whilst they are not favourites or anything now I enjoy them more now.For me I recall finding his sketchy b&w illustrations in 2ed 40k somewhat jarring, but have come to appreciate the context of their production a little more (put together at a quick turnaround due to a diminished art team) and now they are considered really iconic.
Well we all know I'm a Miller fan-boy ... although I can see how a lot of his weirder and really freaky stuff is probably not to taste his bits of pure fantasy art I feel are sublime and I love the minute pen work. I could stare at those all day. Probably why I also like John's earlier line+wash type work.The jury is out on Ian Scrathy Miller.
I've often felt that way about some of the pieces - so the classic 40K 2nd edition cover art whilst I grant iconic now isn't a piece that works for me - I never felt the central marine "looked quite right". I'm not sure that seems true in all his work, but the "not quite right" is a theme that runs I think through quite a lot of GW artists at various points, bits of "off" perspective and so forth. Which feels a bit mean of me to say given I can't draw for toffee, but I shall sit and be a keyboard critic for a moment ...I don't mind his feel or the landscapes, but pretty much every time he does anatomy I find it jarring, things are never in proportion.
Hands are too big, joints in the wrong place, body parts too long/short/thin etc.

Les did some classic bits for GW, dark future pieces, the LOTD cover, HeroQuest of course. Depending on the gamma of the printing of the Confrontation image (red armoured marine blasting the skavvies) the poor marine can look like he's had his head cut out and stuck on (the Les Edwards art book is a good (bad?) example of this). I like Les' art and have one of his little Goblin faces framed on the back of my office door.I think I liked Les Edwards
Paul did plenty in what I think of as the golden age. I vividly remember all his illustrations in Squats section in WD 111. Lovely stuff.I loved Paul Bonner but he was later?
Yes, totally.... but also on occasion grimdark ie 'the gothick and the eldritch' was a compilation of some of his stuff.I always felt Jes Goodwin's art was undervalued compared to his sculpting....
I wouldn’t say that! https://ebay.io/m/45CvAb 😅I always felt Jes Goodwin's art was undervalued compared to his sculpting....
It is completely down to individual preference. Simon Bisley and the entire wave of artists he influenced never worried overmuch about proportion of anatomical correctness (or in fact continuity if I'm honest). In the fantasy genre Josh Kirby also took this approach to extremes especially for his Discworld covers (which I adore). When I was reading 2000AD in the early 90s they used to really go to town on this sort of thing and I absolutely loved it (pictured below Greg Staples's Dredd)I don't mind his feel or the landscapes, but pretty much every time he does anatomy I find it jarring, things are never in proportion.
Hands are too big, joints in the wrong place, body parts too long/short/thin etc.
Heads are the size of knees etc.
He has a style that I don't mind, just I don't like the proportions on the people he draws, they are not anatomically correct and that takes away for me.
I am not really sure who was around at the same time, Carl Critchlow I like, though he was very much a different style.
I loved Paul Bonner but he was later?
Those 2 are the only ones I know I liked, liked enough that their names are locked into my head.
I think I liked Les Edwards, I am off now to see who I liked.
The jury is out on Ian Scrathy Miller.
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