I did it! I've finally found a decent copy of this Keith Parkinson's painting that graced the cover of AD&D's REF2. I have been looking for a copy on the internet for over 12 years and all I could find were little postage stamp sized thumbnails. Check it out in all its beauty.
But back to Keith Parkinson and his art for D&D, or TSR at large. It's my understanding that Parkinson was one of four oil painters who TSR's Art Director, Jim Roslof, added to its art division ("The Pit") in the early 1980s as D&D took off into mainstream America. The other three oil painters were Jeff Easley, Larry Elmore, and Clyde Caldwell. To this list should be added Jim Holloway, but I'll save that for another post.
Anyhow, these four guys provided the covers for the large majority of TSR books published in the 1980s and created the visual entrance for D&D. Their art grounded D&D in the 1980s, in an esthetic that was more level with Tolkien and his knockoffs, such as Terry Brooks and his Shanara series, than what D&D had previously been, which was more a sword and sorcery idea set amid dungeon mazes; think Fritz Lieber's Fafherd and the Grey Mouser or Glen Cook's Black Company series, I guess. Probably you could just look at Gary Gygax's infamous Appendix N list of books to get a sense of what esthetic was driving D&D prior to it going mass market in the 1980s. The four greats from TRS's Pit took D&D out of the dungeon and into the light of a more real world. This was espacially the case with Parkinson and Elmore whose paintings so often feature landscapes, and trees.
Suffice to say that the four oil painters of TSR's Pit did some beautiful work that wouldn't put off parents by depicting demons, murder, and mayhem; all D&D staples before going mainstream. Parkinson and Elmore in particular did those landscapes that were just on the Frederick Remington side of a Thomas Kinkaid paining, or harkened back to N.C. Wyeth and Howard Pyle illustrations for Robin Hood, and King Arthur, etc., something that may have resonated positively with parents buying D&D books for their good kids. The look seems to have put off many old school D&D gamers, but I loved it! Just look back to Parkinson's painting for REF 2, it's both gorgeous and evocative; hints at danger just off the edge of the canvas, while the horses with their gear and the distant mountain speak to a long journey into wild lands of adventure.
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