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TurnerMohan β€” Helm Hammerhand

Published: 2013-12-09 09:19:57 +0000 UTC; Views: 10344; Favourites: 216; Downloads: 115
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Description One of two color covers for an online game centered around the Long Winter, an event which occurred in middle-earth in TA. 2758, some 260 years before the war of the ring, in which the Rohirrim under King Helm Hammerhand held out against the invading Dunlandings in the deeping valley that, centuries later, would still bear his name.

Helm's personal story is one of a king and a great man, turned by loss and desperation into an animal, set against this elemental backdrop of the relentless cold and snowfall. Here we see him (I imagine) as his people find him one frosty morning, frozen to death, still standing watch out on the Dike. It is one of those images that heroic legends are made out of, and Helm does live on (in the legends of both the rohirrim and the dunlandings) as the guardian spirit of the Deep, awed by his people and feared by their enemies.

Old, lean, crazed Helm, honed by grief into a primordial spirit of vengeance, seemed a good single image for the game's cover; he is middle-earth's King Lear (or at least a fine contender for the spot) and like Lear - orΒ Hidetora, his japanese stand-in from Kurosawa's "Ran," a heavy influence on my portrayal of the character - his face tells his story. I wanted him to have the feel of a stone cliff-face, too steep for standing snow-cover, rising up out of the snowy field, like the hornburg itself Link

A wonderful thing about Tolkien's stories and characters (and very appealing from an illustrative point of view) is that they have a resonance and familiarity to them; many of them, while they are independently themselves, play into this larger world of mythic archetype, as if they were merely middle-earth's versions of their stories and characters (like Turin, whose story has significant shades of Oediphus, or the two trees of the valar, evoking both the nordic Yggdrasil and the two trees in Eden). It seems fitting (and often very easy) when illustrating Tolkien's world, to do likewise. Who is this old man out in the snow? Is he Odin? Santa Claus? Old Man Winter? Jack Frost? Jack London? Jack Torrence? In a way he's all of the above, and of course, he is also Helm.
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Comments: 31

Dimeolas7 [2015-08-23 00:14:26 +0000 UTC]

He has the look of a legend, if I may ask is the game running and where do we find it?

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TurnerMohan In reply to Dimeolas7 [2015-08-27 02:44:47 +0000 UTC]

Tell you the truth i dont exactly know, it's on this french tolkien fan site, if you look up "le long hiver" in connection with tolkien or my name you'll probably come across it, hope that helps

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Dimeolas7 In reply to TurnerMohan [2015-08-28 02:17:26 +0000 UTC]

will have a look, thanks

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Artigas [2014-04-19 21:41:47 +0000 UTC]

A man to respect. You did it right again Turner! Really imposing figure!

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TurnerMohan In reply to Artigas [2014-04-20 07:50:12 +0000 UTC]

Helm don't fuck around

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Helegris-Nimbereth [2014-03-29 03:10:47 +0000 UTC]

This is eerie, beautiful, and powerful. The blue definitely gives it an icy feeling, and the dark shadows on the face give it a sense of wisdom. Very nicely done, I really like it!

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TurnerMohan In reply to Helegris-Nimbereth [2014-03-29 04:50:40 +0000 UTC]

thank you so much. What a great complement! I'm glad you like it.

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Helegris-Nimbereth In reply to TurnerMohan [2014-03-29 21:37:56 +0000 UTC]

I'm glad you liked my comment and you're very welcome!Β  Β 

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curtis-macdonald [2014-03-19 12:29:51 +0000 UTC]

Looks really good. Nice use of colour. Blue is associated with authority psychologically I believe.

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TurnerMohan In reply to curtis-macdonald [2014-03-21 15:37:40 +0000 UTC]

thank you very much, and i'm glad you like the colors. I've heard studies that say huge beards and clint eastwood scowls are also psychologically associated with authority

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Darkendrama [2014-02-17 15:25:19 +0000 UTC]

Incredible work!!!! Β 

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secretoflurkmore [2013-12-30 06:12:33 +0000 UTC]

I admire how the cragginess of the face flows with the beard and hair, there's a feeling of uncountable years upon this person, an ageless sense of mythic heroism.

I could easily see this in artwork for any of the Norse or Icelandic sagas.

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TurnerMohan In reply to secretoflurkmore [2013-12-30 18:13:03 +0000 UTC]

thanks, that is pretty much exactly what i was going for! one of the things i like most about tolkiens work is how his peoples and characters (particularly those who only get a periferal mention, like helm here) is that, in addition to being themselves, they could so easily fit into a broader context of heroic legend. i wanted him to look just as at home on a cover of beowulf or the prose edda as in a lotr context. glad you think i pulled it off!

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secretoflurkmore In reply to TurnerMohan [2013-12-31 02:08:41 +0000 UTC]

You definitely succeeded

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Zeonista [2013-12-13 17:30:34 +0000 UTC]

Oops, it disappeared! Β  Never mind, joys of high tech, etc. Again, let me congratulate on this painting. It really is the culmination of your efforts to date concerning the story of Helm.

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TurnerMohan In reply to Zeonista [2013-12-14 00:54:26 +0000 UTC]

it seemed a good piece for a cover and summary of his story. It should alsoΒ serve quite nicelyΒ as a pissed off Santa for this year's christmas cards.

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Zeonista In reply to TurnerMohan [2013-12-14 06:46:42 +0000 UTC]

Helm Hammerhand wishes you a Merry Coal-mas!! Β 

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JoshMACKEY [2013-12-10 20:47:04 +0000 UTC]

Brilliant work. Β Love the expression!

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TurnerMohan In reply to JoshMACKEY [2013-12-11 04:04:07 +0000 UTC]

thanks!

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cartert3 [2013-12-10 03:56:02 +0000 UTC]

that is awesome!

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TurnerMohan In reply to cartert3 [2013-12-10 04:21:26 +0000 UTC]

why thank you!

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ShanghaiSarah [2013-12-10 00:26:24 +0000 UTC]

Wonderful & creative work!

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TurnerMohan In reply to ShanghaiSarah [2013-12-10 01:25:15 +0000 UTC]

Thank you!!

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Dwimerlaid [2013-12-09 16:34:00 +0000 UTC]

MARAVILLOSO!!!

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TurnerMohan In reply to Dwimerlaid [2013-12-10 01:24:53 +0000 UTC]

gracias

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Jakegothicsnake [2013-12-09 13:01:58 +0000 UTC]

I personally got a mixture of seeing Ulmo, and the River God from the 2008 adaptation of Prince Caspian.

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TurnerMohan In reply to Jakegothicsnake [2013-12-09 17:23:28 +0000 UTC]

well I dont see Ulmo as looking as looking un-like the river god from prince caspian (or helm for that matter) but i cant honestly say it had occured to me while painting.

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Jakegothicsnake In reply to TurnerMohan [2013-12-10 03:24:45 +0000 UTC]

True, but then again the river god from the book isn't even described as how he is depicted in the film! XD

I don't know if I told you this, but to tell you the truth, I kind ofΒ dislike how they depicted the the river god, the dryads(those ghostly, swirly flower petals that shape themselves into women) and naiads(those liquid mermaids from The Voyage of the Dawn Treader movie) in those movies......To me, those are not I would have imagined them....

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TurnerMohan In reply to Jakegothicsnake [2013-12-10 04:20:33 +0000 UTC]

i wouldn't know, I've never read the chronicles of narnia (beyond LWW) or seen prince caspian (though I've watched that river god scene several times, just because it looked really cool) the "chronicles of narnia" movies in general (the new ones i mean) always sort of put me off; they've got some good design work in them to be sure, but I always felt that they were trying too hard to resemble (and in so doing, to cash in on) the huge-scaled, armored-up, epic high fantasy look and feel of Jackson's Lord or the Rings movies. Not that they're alone, pretty much everybody has, resulting in all these re-tellings of relatively small scale fairy tails like hansel and gretel or snow white being recast as these huge lord-of-the-rings-esque action movies (even jackson's own blown out adaptation of "the hobbit" has fallen victim to the trend)

I should probably be more into Narnia than I am, but, while the two were friends and CS Lewis thought the world of tolkien's writing, Tolkien quite openly never cared for CS Lewis's fictional works, which has probably colored my opinion of them unduly (that's also why i cant really picture the two fictional worlds combined together - that and the fact that tolkien's world has a distinctly more northern european dark-age vibe whereas narnia seems more classical/medieval) but also, from what I've seen, the christian themes, while present in both authors' work, just seem so much more overt in the CON. So far my favorite CS Lewis related thing that I've come across is Joss Ackland's portrayal of him in "Through the Shadowlands"

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Jakegothicsnake In reply to TurnerMohan [2013-12-10 05:16:23 +0000 UTC]

You do have a point. Another thing that I find a bit repetitive is when I look at various games, media, etc. that have fantasy setting, they usually tend to follow the very same formula from Tolkien's when it concerns the various races/peoples/etc. There's always an elf race, a dwarf race, one or two monster-type races like orcs, trolls, ogres, or goblins, occasionally another small race like hobbits/halfings or gnomes, etc. Not that I have a problem with those fantasy races mind you, but it would be nice to see people who make these certain fantasy settings branch out and perhaps include other mythological beings as well like the ones from grek mythology. Thankfully there are some fantasy universes that do that like Narnia and Warcraft.

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TurnerMohan In reply to Jakegothicsnake [2013-12-11 02:11:14 +0000 UTC]

tolkien himself seems to have pretty closely followed the cast of characters seen in norse mythology; elves, dwarves, trolls/ents/giants, dragons, ect. hobbits (and orcs, as this more serious reimagining of classic fairy tale "goblins") are probably his most original creation, though they borrow from a lot of fairy tale characterizations of elves, fairies, or gnomes. most game makers and pseudo-tolkienien fantasy writers have clung pretty closely to those archetypes, resulting in much of the "epic fantasy" genre today having a very tolkienian and, in consequence, very 'northern' feel. it helps to be kind of careful, i think, with how you mix and match fantasy creatures from different times/places/cultures (i wrote a little bit about that in my description for
This piece , which might interest you

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