Mythmere wrote:JS: whether you like the picture or not, you can't say it fails to match up with pulp art from the pulp era. It actually is pulp art from that era that TLG bought rights to, and it's from one of the major pulp artists. Certainly that doesn't mean one has to like it, but it can't be accused of missing the pulp mark except insofar as it misses the "blood and thunder" side of S&S pulp, which it certainly does miss. But it's pulp art of an amazingly high quality of rendition, composition, and for hitting the feel it aims for. Yet, as DCS points out, it might not have been the best match for GH (oops, I mean Yggsburgh).
You're saying that this:
...is pulp art?
I know you're an artist and all that, but to call that "pulp art" in comparison to some of the great stuff that graced the covers of scifi/fantasy/horror fiction during the pulp era, or the "old school" art that graced the covers of the early (and best) art of the new-born gaming era (70's to the early 80's), is silly.
Its washed out, bland, blah. I have no problem with a knight gracing the cover of a gaming product (since I don't think the idea of a questing knight is
necessarily out of the bounds for the sword and sorcery genre), but the Yggsburgh cover is completely lifeless. It has none of the vim and vigor of the pulp era.
Its not that it shouldn't be on the cover of the first installment of Castle Greyhawk, or any other gaming product. Its that its more appropriate for some kind of lame, medieval, historical romance novel. Its about as boring as it gets, and frankly I don't see how anyone would consider that cover to be "old school" anywhere near the level of great stuff that Otus, Sutherland, and company were putting out that left an indelible mark on gaming art.
The Yggsburgh cover is about as "pulpy" as C&C is "old school."
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