Comments: 28
BenjaminOssoff [2017-02-28 01:17:17 +0000 UTC]
Beautiful and mysterious!
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Mahrfra [2016-08-27 11:49:05 +0000 UTC]
This is simply wonderful...
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sandcastler [2016-05-25 19:44:25 +0000 UTC]
I love the looks of their slender figures! They'd look exotic with minor aquatic adaptations such as webbed fingers & toes, too!!
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SorenTalon [2016-05-21 08:14:30 +0000 UTC]
I love your detailed explanations for each of your Tolkien-inspired works.Β
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Libra1010 [2016-05-11 21:57:23 +0000 UTC]
Β This is ... QUITE Glorious, Master Mohan; in fact I would happily argue this it has more than a little of the sublime to it.
Β ... I don't suppose you have any spare invitations to this particular Vacation Location, do you?Β
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TurnerMohan In reply to Zeonista [2016-05-22 09:41:17 +0000 UTC]
Seems fitting to me, and alqualonde being near to the "girdle" of arda, it seems a good candidate for all that beautiful, bright colored tropical sea life (though really why, without the sun's light, the whole of arda above and below sea level isnt simply a frozen, lifeless wasteland is i suppose a question best left un-pondered)
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pilsator [2016-05-10 17:33:33 +0000 UTC]
Very Lost Tales-ish in its "colorful", classic approach. Like it a lot.
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Armel [2016-05-03 06:17:53 +0000 UTC]
Great picture! And I remember when I was reading the parts relevant to see elves making the exact same reasoning. One may add that it is possible that some of the water maia may have been taking mermaid shapes (although of course non cannon, this is possible since they may take the shape they wish). Osse's maia may have shared some of his partial corruption and lured people to their doom.
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TurnerMohan In reply to Armel [2016-05-04 14:17:53 +0000 UTC]
typically it seems in tolkien's world that beings - whether animals, sapient "speaking peoples" or even the maiar who can change shape - are "one and whole" rather than "chimeral" (meaning possessing distinct anatomical parts of distinct creatures thrown together) to me it seems likely that chimeral creatures - minotaurs, manticores, lamasu, griffons, sphinxes - are things that would only exist in middle-earth in the form of (usually human) art and iconography; confused interpretations of real creatures or beings that become canonized in art and appear decorating the material culture of men. The numenoreans, for example, seem prime candidates to come up with and then cannonize the image of the half-fish-half-woman as a synthesis and visual representation of received folklore of the sea-elves of old, or to begin adopting, in their imperial phase, many twisted creatures from, say, haradric and khandian art traditions; most of the creatures i listed above, though familiar in greek and roman mythology, are middle-eastern in origin, so it seems fitting that the lands of middle-earth roughly correspondent to the middle-east/persia/india would produce similar mythical beasts, and that numenor in the time of imperial expansion, would come to incorporate the art and culture of those colonized peoples into their own. furthermore, chimeral creatures seem to have been something Tolkien found personally distasteful, or atleast he disapproved of the mixing of them with creatures from northern, germanic mythology which, whether good or evil, beastial or humanoid, tend to be homogenous and non-chimeral. that CS Lewis had freely mixed the wolves and dwarves and giants of nordic mythology with fauns and centaurs was one of the many issues he apparently took with the Narnia books.
all that said though, it is ofcourse attractive to entertain the possibility of actual mermaids in tolkien's world, and the idea that they'd be evil maiar gives the chimeral aspect of them more of a pass (as it seems likely that the rebel maiar, being spiritually "unclean" themselves would perhaps take on warped, unnatural forms, especially those which combine traits of animals with those of men or elves, mocking the very "christian" exclusivity of the children of illuvatar from the animals of arda, this was part of the thinking behind my rather harpy-like attempts at thuringwethil and the vampires of to-in-gaurhoth) but the sea, the domain of ulmo, seems to me a part of middle-earth in which evil doesnt "lurk" or maintain any kind of significant toe-hold. Morgoth is remarked to have never attempted to assail the elves by sea, and the water and rivers of middle-earth are always helping against the darkness, barring the passage of the servants of evil and cleansing the wounds they inflict on the world. There's violence to the sea, ofcourse, the violence and the tumult that is built into the world, and it's not a safe place for men or elves, but i tend not to think that there's active evil in it, the violence left in the sea likely expressing itself in storm and rogue waves and riptides. that at any rate is my interpretation of Osse (and presumably many of his "house")
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Armel In reply to TurnerMohan [2016-05-11 12:14:51 +0000 UTC]
I almost completely agree with your text, I would never think for a second that Tolkien would entertain the thought for more than a moment. I do agree that it would not be impossible for a maia to take a chimeric form, if he so wanted, especially a corrupt maia. As to the corruption of Osse, I also agree it is residual and would not be compatible with really evil maia still serving him. I was only really exploring the idea as a thought experiment ^^
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wolfsbane6 [2016-04-30 17:25:29 +0000 UTC]
Awesome work!
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deviantwin15 [2016-04-30 14:02:33 +0000 UTC]
...Such a ethereal feel to it, lovely!
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Hman999 In reply to TurnerMohan [2016-04-30 16:05:28 +0000 UTC]
You're most welcome.
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Andharion [2016-04-30 10:41:18 +0000 UTC]
Completely new view on the Teleri for me. Nice one.
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