By Terryl Whitlatch

Itā€™s so lovely to be able to return to Muddy Colors after a sabbatical of some monthsā€”itā€™s been a busy time, juggling deadlines and traveling related to the same.

As a creature designer, I create concept art that not only deals with imaginary beings, but also actual speciesā€”indeed, my favorite subjects have always been, and continue to be, living and prehistoric animals.

Whenever I am assigned to invent a creature, I go to the sourceā€”actual animalsā€”that will inform my creature designs, even if the end result appears at first glance to be far removed from what Iā€™ve observed or sketched at the zoo, pet store, or aquarium. However, the underlying anatomy is all real animal, just morphed or stretched a bit here and there.

And what is just as important is what I learn as I watch themā€”how they move and how gravity affects the anatomy, the interesting poses and situations they get themselves into, behaviors, and personalities unique to each individual. Human beings, I am convinced, who have the conceit that an animalā€™s behavior is solely mechanical, with the only goal being to increase its gene pool, have never gotten out of themselves and watched an animal be itself.

This has a trickle down effect that translates into the personality of imaginary creatures on both a conscious and unconscious level, and gives them a sense of realityā€”a dimensionality that audiences can tune into and find sympathy with. This is my hope, anyway.

For example, weā€™re all used to seeing dragons in their iconic, hero, and beauty shot poses. Weā€™ve seen enough of these so that these scenes have a sense of contrived, dioramas of heroic taxidermy, which has the paradoxical effect of perpetuating unreality. But, left to themselves, and unobserved by human beings, what would a dragon, or better yet, dragon-like creature, prefer to be doing? Would it be in an awkward pose, scratching its jaw with a hind leg? Sharpening its claws on a tree trunk? At least sometimes, Iā€™m sure. This is a question I ask myself all the time, to be constantly challenged, learning, and pushing the envelope.

While Iā€™m not at liberty to publish current and recent work due to nondisclosure agreement status, I have gotten permissions to share the study sketches of actual animals in preparation for various assignments, which Iā€™ll be sharing with you over the next several months, with minimal touch-ups, right out of the sketchbooks.

To start, here are a couple pages of very creaturely, but very much alive, creatures, from our own small Blue Planet. I could not invent better creatures than theseā€”in fact, it is these beings that teach me how, as much as I finitely can, to invent creatures.