Designing Dragons (Intro & Part 1)

Despite all the fantasy stuff I’ve done in my career, I never get very excited about drawing dragons. Seriously. In fact, I kinda-sorta dread it.

Dragons have to be the most overwrought, over-rendered, over-exposed creatures in modern fantasy today. They are found in video games, books, toys, television and movies as they are integrated into almost all the world cultures since ancient times. Consequently, it seems like every possible rendition of this mythical beast has been done. How can I come up with something new, exciting and fresh after centuries of masters have already done so?

D&D Pseudodragon

Honestly, I don’t like drawing them - even though I think they are awesome creatures and I love stories about them. There’s Smaug, Fafnir, Puff (the Magic dragon), Dragonslayer, Dragonheart, Dragonology, the Hydra, Falkor, Eragon and, of course, Dungeons & Dragons.

Ironically, despite my years of contributing art to this iconic fantasy game, I hardly ever rendered its namesake beast. There were quite a few gaming illustrators who had the dragon-thing covered, which was fine by me. I did however, do a few dragons for the gaming magazine of the same title. Even though they are on my site, I will post them here again.

Dragon Mag Cover #242

In these projects, I went more for a mood and setting over a novel design. The first image, of course, is about the joy of playing games. The second is more about illustrating the power of the female mage who has the ability to conjure up a massive dragon.

Dragon Mag Cover #251

I recently cleaned these images up for a book anthology on dragons published by the French fantasy gallery, Galerie Daniel Maghen.

The gallery asked me to do a new illustration of a dragon - any kind of dragon at all doing dragony things. And they had all sorts of great dragon-scribes adding to the book - Todd Lockwood, Tom Kidd, Jean-Baptiste Monge, and Paul Bonner to name a few. Their dragon depictions were wonderful, and they were doing great dragony things - but I just wasn’t feeling it. Though I did have a sketch of an old knight fighting a slithery dragon:

Dragonslayer sketch

…which they liked, but I felt it was a little trite. And, for some reason, I liked the energy of the sketch more than what I envisioned the final painting to be. Perhaps I am wrong, and I’ll get up the gusto to finally paint it one day.

Then I got clever. I decided to do my own take on a famous dragon image: Rapheal’s 1506 painting, “St. George & the Dragon”.

St. George & The Dragon

Mine was titled “Georgie Boy and the Backyard Dragon”. And I didn’t bother redesigning the dragon (or the horse head) and they didn’t like it. It wasn’t dragony enough I suppose. So I opted for the old dragon covers instead.

Georgie Boy & The Dragon

See? These are tough critters to get excited about rendering. At least they are for me…though I wonder if I should paint my rendition after all…hmmm.

I can see it on a greeting card with a note inside saying “Glad your feeling better - now go slay a dragon” or something cheesy and inspirational like “We all have our battles to fight and facing our fears is the biggest”.

Rapheal would be proud.

Next up: Space Dragons!

4 Responses to “Designing Dragons (Intro & Part 1)”

  1. Mary Beth Says:

    Your dragons look like they have such a great sense of humor, something seriously lacking in other illustrators’ dragons. Dragons are supposed to be intelligent and I always imagine them with a wicked sense of humor, chuckling over the bones of their latest prey!

  2. Ian Says:

    You may not like illustrating them but you do a fantastic job of it. I love drawing dragons and don’t seem to produce anything as wonderful as yours’ and you don’t even like doing them!

    Its funny how dragons seem to have grown. Going by Raphael’s depiction they weren’t much more than large lizards. Today’s dragons are positively colossal by comparison.

    I agree with Mary Beth above. Your dragons seem intelligent and even friendly which is a style that I prefer. I don’t like to think of them as merely evil, knight frying monsters.

    Your fan,
    Ian

  3. Luke Dickey Says:

    Tony, you are great at drawing dragons! I think you could really draw any type of dragon. I love your verson of the Dragonflight one, the dugeons and dragons ones and the Spiderwick one. Id love to see your verson of Smaug. I myself have drawn him many times. Keep up the great work and continue to inspire me!

  4. Gage Says:

    My fav is the red one playing games, like my design of Dr.Serpentine fot the contest

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