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Apparently he didn't make his Saving Throw...

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
Here's a 20 sided dice salute to The Man!

Dungeons and Dragons artist dies
CBC | 6/15/05

David Sutherland, an artist whose work appeared in various Dungeons and Dragons rule books, has died. He was 56 years old.

Sutherland passed away at his home in Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., on June 6 from chronic liver failure.

Although he remained faceless to Dungeons and Dragons players, a generation of gamers grew up with Sutherland's otherworldly images in the 1970s and '80s.

Perhaps his best-known illustration is the one that appeared on the cover of the first Dungeons and Dragons set.

A simple composition, it shows a wand-waving magic user and a knight, his longbow drawn, squaring off against a dragon who sits – à la Smaug from The Hobbit – atop a vast pile of gold coins and jewels.

Sutherland's clean, expressive artwork helped players picture their own imaginary "campaigns," as the ongoing games of Dungeons and Dragons were called.

Working at the company Tactical Studies Rules under the game's co-inventor, Gary Gygax, Sutherland was part of a team of illustrators that produced pictures of battles and monsters.

His fellow artists included Erol Otis, Darlene Pekul, David Trampier and others.

Sutherland's work also appeared on the cover of the Dungeon Masters Guide, the book used by the referee who would oversee each gaming session.

He also did the cover for the Monster Manual, the compendium of foes that players fought for treasure.

A Minneapolis native, Sutherland trained as a commercial artist before going to Vietnam to serve as a military policeman. After his return, he launched a career as a fantasy artist while working odd jobs.

Sutherland's cover art for the 'Dungeon's Masters Guide.' Eventually, a university professor involved in developing Dungeons and Dragons put him in touch with TSR, the Wisconsin firm that emerged as the dominant publisher of role-playing games.

Sutherland also served as TSR's artistic director, but preferred working on his own art.

Sutherland's career stalled after Wizards of the Coast, another gaming concern, bought TSR in the late 1990s and did not rehire him. He recently divorced, and was reportedly still upset at the dissolution of his marriage when he died.

An auction of Sutherland memorabilia was held last year, raising $22,000 US that was used to set up a trust fund for his two daughters. He is also survived by his mother, a sister and a brother.

Following a visitation, Sutherland will receive a military burial on June 22 at Fort Snelling National Cemetery in Minneapolis.

 

H8R

Cranky Pants
Nov 10, 2004
13,959
35
I thought his work was the weakest link in the D&D books.

Whatever - RIP.
 

LordOpie

MOTHER HEN
Oct 17, 2002
21,022
3
Denver
H8R said:
I thought his work was the weakest link in the D&D books.

Whatever - RIP.
wow, you were so into D&D that you worried about the art? Are you still a virgin at 30yo?
 

H8R

Cranky Pants
Nov 10, 2004
13,959
35
LordOpie said:
wow, you were so into D&D that you worried about the art? Are you still a virgin at 30yo?
I played D&D for all of maybe a year in 6th grade. Then I stopped playing and just spent time painting miniatures for friends and drawing, etc. It was a source of ideas for drawing, as were comics and movies.

I actually got really good at the painting. I could add color and sparkle to an eye, etc. (single hair of a brush/magnifying glass type stuff)

So yeah, the art was much more important than the game to me. Sutherlands art was weak compared to many of the other artists working w/ TSR, etc.
 

Ciaran

Fear my banana
Apr 5, 2004
9,841
19
So Cal
H8R said:
And I lost my virginity in Jan '84.

I'm old.

:(
And you're a geek, too.




So am I though. Shoot, I lost my virginity only a few years after you and I do SCA which is almost as geeky as D&D. It would be geekier except that we fight, drink, and get laid. :thumb:
 

LordOpie

MOTHER HEN
Oct 17, 2002
21,022
3
Denver
SCA is far more geeky than D&D... you can hide D&D in your house :blah:

The LARPers cry, "lightning bolt, lightning bolt, lightning bolt!!"
 

MikeD

Leader and Demogogue of the Ridemonkey Satinists
Oct 26, 2001
11,735
1,819
chez moi
I was once discussing/deriding (over email) Joseph Campbell with a good friend...Marine Corps officer, smartest dude I've ever met...we were Echols Scholars at the University of Virginia together. Anyhow, he wrote, "Yeah, don't you think that if Dungeons and Dragons had been invented a few years earlier, old J.C. would've never actually written any books? He'd be the world's oldest 30th-level Paladin, eagerly stuffing trolls into his 'bags of holding.'"

To which I replied, "Dude, you'd better watch the D&D humor...it cuts both ways.

He came back with, "I like to keep my enemies close. Just close enough to hit with my +2 Crossbow of Wounding."

MD
 

Skookum

bikey's is cool
Jul 26, 2002
10,184
0
in a bear cave
Since we're on the topic of ultimate mundane.

i had all those books in the 6th grade and with pencil stenciled my name in various black and white pictures in the books. Carbon could be seen at the right angle with the light. Books got stolen, kid stole em, brought em in a few weeks to show em off, i was like (Cartman voice... "Hey buddy, nice books, can i take a look at em?") found out they were mine. Second hurdle was proving they were mine since the kid's mom was the playground teacher, and my sixth grade teacher hated me (he always had foamy white spit collected at the sides of his mouth and had terrible halitosis). Anyways i asked the kid if there was anything special with the books, i revealed the secret mark, and the rest is history. i think i finally wound up trading those books for comic books, haha the geekdom transformed.

Also a buddy of mine who sells comics cards etc recently got his hands on the real first issue Dungeons and Dragons books. They were little 6X8 paperback books with even crappier art. He wound up selling them for a good profit on Ebay, can't remember for how much.....
 

stevew

resident influencer
Sep 21, 2001
41,159
10,097
MikeD said:
He'd be the world's oldest 30th-level Paladin, eagerly stuffing trolls into his 'bags of holding.'"

To which I replied, "Dude, you'd better watch the D&D humor...it cuts both ways.

He came back with, "I like to keep my enemies close. Just close enough to hit with my +2 Crossbow of Wounding."

MD
Damn that is funny.