Singular Sensation: The Cowardly Lion
This Singular Sensation entry focuses on the Cowardly Lion illustration that I did for the original "contact Me: page of this site. I wanted to present him bigger here than he appears on that page. Everyone knows the Cowardly Lion, but most people are used to thinking of the Cowardly Lion in terms of a person dressed up in a costume, like Burt Lahr in the MGM movie. However, in the books, the Cowardly Lion is a real lion who talks, like all of the animals in Oz do.
I think that when the lion is presented as an actual large lion who acts cowardly, as opposed to a person in a costume, the visuals get to be more interesting and contradictory to the behavior. For this interpretation of the Cowardly Lion, I wanted to make him more personal. I made his eyes bigger than an actual lion's eyes, while keeping the rest of the lion's anatomical proportions intact. Another thing about the eyes, were that I based them on my dog, Humphrey. He's like my own personal Cowardly Lion, who is all bark, but when someone actually stands up to him (like a cat), he runs away crying.
The bows are things that John R. Neill drew on the Cowardly Lion when he originally illustrated the Oz books. I think they're great touches that serve to visually reinforce the contrasts going on with the cowardliness and the powerful frame of a lion. Michael Herring usually painted the bows light blue in the covers that he did for the Del Rey paperback editions of the Oz books, and those were the printings of the books that I grew up with, so I tend to try to give little nods to him and Neill when I illustrate Oz characters.
Pencils, Ink, Prismacolor Color Pencils, and Photoshop.
©Kevenn T. Smith 2011
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