I was surprised to receive a parcel recently from a colleague who is also a follower of this blog. It was a copy of a 1984 book entitled The Guide To Fantasy Art Techniques which she had found gathering dust amongst some old books in her office. As I flicked through the book I realised that this gift was in fact distinctly tongue-in-cheek, filled as it is with images of busty bikini-clad barbarian babes and horn-helmeted he-men. But as I flipped past all these dodgy fantasy clichés, suddenly the work of one artist caught my eye. It was darker, more gothic, and much more magical. The artist was Ian Miller, and I needed to find out more.
It turns out Mr Miller has had a long and distinguished career as an illustrator, and has created book covers for the Gormenghast trilogy, which I absolutely adore, as well as the writings of H.P. Lovecraft, which are high up on my list of magical things to read. I was perhaps most excited to discover that he designed the covers for a number of the Fighting Fantasy gamebooks with which I was obsessed as a rather geeky youngster.
I am now the lucky owner of an original work by Ian Miller, a drawing entitled Blue Ent 2 which follows on rather nicely from last week’s post about a magical tree.
Miller’s influences are many and varied. As a child his imagination was fired by the creativity of theatre and film, and more recently he has listed Albrecht Dürer, Leonardo da Vinci and the German Expressionists as his visual inspiration. His work is often surreal, sometimes downright creepy. Hearing of my interest in silvan magic, Mr Miller kindly sent over an image of another marvelously sinister recent work, The Terrible Path
You can find out more about the weird and wonderful world of Ian Miller at http://www.ian-miller.org